Free at Last? Reflections on Freedom and the Abolition of the British Transatlantic Slave Trade
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
The global commemorative events of 2007 that marked the bicentennial anniversary of the parliamentary abolition of the African slave trade provided opportunity for widespread discussion between politicians, community groups, museums and heritage organisations, the clergy, and scholars, as to the meanings of colonial and post-colonial freedom. As was evident from the tensions emerging from those debates, the subject of the transatlantic slave trade and slavery remains highly charged, as does the extent to which its legacy of racism, predicated on theoretical assumptions of European cultural, social, political and economic superiority, continues to maintain and reproduce complex systems of inequalities between peoples and societies. Free at Last? is an edited collection of interdisciplinary perspectives that critically reflects on the struggles of enslaved peoples and anti-slavery activists to effect the abolition of the British slave trade, as well as the post-abolition global legacies of those diverse struggles for equality. The chapters bring together multiple narratives and discourses about the British abolition to reflect critically and comparatively on: the boundaries between slavery and freedom; the contestations and championing of freedom; and the legacies of slavery and abolition in the contemporary context.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 148 x 212mm
Publication Date: 04 Aug 2011
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781443828703
About
Amar Wahab is currently a Lecturer in Sociology at The University of the West Indies (St. Augustine Trinidad and Tobago). His research in historical sociology focuses on systems of slavery and indentureship in the colonial Caribbean and their roles in the making of Western liberalism. He is the author of Colonial Inventions: Landscape Power and Representation in Nineteenth-Century Trinidad (Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2010). Cecily Jones is Associate Professor in Sociology University of Warwick (UK) and former Director of the Centre for Caribbean Studies at the same institution. Her research interests primarily address issues of race gender and childhood within colonial and postcolonial societies. She is the author of Engendering Whiteness: White Women and Colonialism in Barbados and North Carolina 16271865 (Manchester University Press 2007) and co-editor with (David Dabydeen and John Gilmore) of the critically acclaimed Oxford Companion to Black British History (Oxford University Press 2007 2009 2010).
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