Dibia’s World: Life on an Early Sugar Plantation

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Caribbean history of the seventeenth century
Category=NHTS
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forthcoming
French colonial history
French Guiana
Slavery
Sugar production

Product details

  • ISBN 9781805966319
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 May 2026
  • Publisher: Liverpool University Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Dibia was educated in Africa, stolen across the sea and sold into slavery. He spent the rest of his life on a sugar plantation, where he worked with Agoüya, drank Aboré’s rum, married Izabelle and had a son named Paul. This book tells the story of the community he lived in with a hundred others in a colonial outpost of the Caribbean. It depicts the everyday life of enslaved Africans and Native Americans in remarkable detail, showing their names, relationships, skills, health and interactions, as they contended with and resisted their enslavement. Most studies of plantation life examine well-established colonies in the century before abolition. This work provides a counterpoint by depicting the founding population of an African-American community in the early years of the industrial sugar plantation complex. Drawing on a planter’s manuscript, shipping records, missionary accounts and seventeenth-century scraps of paper, Dibia’s World will appeal to specialists as well as general readers interested in the early Atlantic world, Creole societies, slavery and African-American history.

William Jennings is a senior lecturer in French at the University of Waikato in New Zealand and has published widely on Atlantic and Pacific encounters in the French colonial world. Recent works include a study of early slave shipping and a book co-authored with Stefan Pfänder on the origins of a Creole language.