Anti-Slavery and Australia

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A01=Jane Lydon
Aboriginal
Aboriginal Australia
Aboriginal Australians
Anti-slavery Arguments
Anti-slavery Movement
Australian Aboriginal People
Australian colonization
Author_Jane Lydon
Blackbirding
Botany Bay
British abolition
British Anti-slavery Movement
British Empire history
Caribbean emancipation
Caribbean Slavery
Category=NHTB
Category=NHTQ
Category=NHTS
Class
Colonial Reformers
Colonization
Colony
Convicts
Decolonization
East Indies
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Governance
High Gdp Country
humanitarianism
Hyde Park Barracks
Indigenous dispossession
Industrialization
Jurisprudence
Justice
Land Commoditization
Missionary work
Modern Slavery
Modern Slavery Act
National Library
Pacific Labour Trade
post-emancipation imperial geopolitics
Race
racial categorisation theory
Racism
Revolution
Settlement
Settler Colonial Histories
settler colonialism studies
Slavery
Swan River
Tasmania
Tasmanian Aboriginal People
Torres Strait Islanders
Trade
Transatlantic Slavery
UK Act
unfree labour systems
Van Diemen's Land
Van Diemen’s Land
Wakefield's Scheme
Wakefield's Theories
Wakefield’s Scheme
Wakefield’s Theories
White Australia
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138334724
  • Weight: 440g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Bringing the histories of British anti-slavery and Australian colonization together changes our view of both. This book explores the anti-slavery movement in imperial scope, arguing that colonization in Australasia facilitated emancipation in the Caribbean, even as abolition powerfully shaped the Settler Revolution. The anti-slavery campaign was deeply entwined with the administration of the empire and its diverse peoples, as well as the radical changes demanded by industrialization and rapid social change in Britain. Abolition posed problems to which colonial expansion provided the answer, intimately linking the end of slavery to systematic colonization and Indigenous dispossession. By defining slavery in the Caribbean as the opposite of freedom, a lasting impact of abolition was to relegate other forms of oppression to lesser status, or to deny them. Through the shared concerns of abolitionists, slave-owners, and colonizers, a plastic ideology of ‘free labour’ was embedded within post-emancipation imperialist geopolitics, justifying the proliferation of new forms of unfree labour and defining new racial categories. The celebration of abolition has overshadowed post-emancipation continuities and transformations of slavery that continue to shape the modern world.

Jane Lydon is the Wesfarmers Chair of Australian History at The University of Western Australia. Her research centres upon Australia’s colonial past and its legacies in the present. She is interested in the ways that popular and especially visual cultures have shaped ideas and debates about race, identity and culture that persist today.

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