Slaves in Paris

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18th century france
A01=Miranda Frances Spieler
A01=Miranda Spieler
african diaspora
atlantic history
Author_Miranda Frances Spieler
Author_Miranda Spieler
Category=NH
Category=NHTS
colonial history
colonial slavery
emancipation struggles
enslaved people
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
freedom struggles
french colonies
french empire
french imperialism
french legal history
french slavery
fugitive slaves
hidden histories
historical biography
indian ocean
Jennifer Morgan Laboring Women
Laurent Dubois Avengers of the New World
legal culture
old regime france
prerevolutionary paris
race and law
racial discrimination
racial laws
Rebecca Scott Freedom Papers
slave biographies
slave deportation
Stephanie Smallwood Saltwater Slavery
Sue Peabody There Are No Slaves in France
Sylviane Diouf Servants of Allah
west indies

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674986541
  • Weight: 568g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Jun 2025
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A pioneering biographical study of enslaved people and their struggle for freedom in prerevolutionary Paris, by an award-winning historian of France and the French Empire.

In the decades leading up to the French Revolution, when Paris was celebrated as an oasis of liberty, slaves fled there, hoping to be freed. They pictured Paris as a refuge from France’s notorious slave-trading ports.

The French were late to the slave trade, but they dominated the global market in enslaved people by the late 1780s. This explosive growth transformed Paris, the cultural capital of the Enlightenment, into a dangerous place for people in bondage. Those seeking freedom in Paris faced manhunts, arrest, and deportation. Some put their faith in lawyers, believing the city’s courts would free them. Examining the lives of those whose dashed hopes and creative persistence capture the spirit of the era, Miranda Spieler brings to light a hidden story of slavery and the struggle for freedom.

Fugitive slaves collided with spying networks, nosy neighbors, and overlapping judicial authorities. Their clandestine lives left a paper trail. In a feat of historical detective work, Spieler retraces their steps and brings to light the new racialized legal culture that permeated every aspect of everyday life. She pieces together vivid, granular portraits of men, women, and children who came from Africa, the Caribbean, and the Indian Ocean. We learn of their strategies and hiding places, their family histories and relationships to well-known Enlightenment figures. Slaves in Paris is a history of hunted people. It is also a tribute to their resilience.

Miranda Spieler is the author of Empire and Underworld: Captivity in French Guiana. She is Professor of History and Politics at the American University of Paris.

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