Non-U.S. Slavery

      
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Books

Books from Our Catalog

  • Tropical Babylons : sugar and the making of the Atlantic World, 1450-1680 - edited by Stuart B. Schwartz
    ISBN/ISSN: 0807828750
  • Centering woman : gender discourses in Caribbean slave society - Hilary McD. Beckles
    ISBN/ISSN: 9768123796
  • The slave societies of the Caribbean - editor, Franklin W. Knight
    ISBN/ISSN: 9231031465

 

 
Atlantic Slavery Books

Robin Blackburn, The Making of New World Slavery

Seymour Drescher, Capitalism and Anti-Slavery

David Eltis, Europeans and the Rise of African Slavery in the Americas

Pieter Emmer, The Dutch in the Atlantic Economy

Linebaugh and Rediker, The Many Headed Hydra

Patrick Manning, Slavery and African Life

Joseph Miller,  Way of Death

John Thornton, Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World

Eric Williams, Capitalism and Slavery

 


 
 

 
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Atlantic Slavery Articles

Selwyn Carrrington, “British West Indian Economic Decline and Abolition 1775-1807,” Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies, 1989 14(27) 33-59.

Robert Conrad, “Economics and Ideals: The British Anti-Slavery Debate Reconsidered,” Indian Historical Review 1988-89 15(1-2) 212-232.

Chaim Kaufmann and Robert Pape, “Explaining Costly International Moral Action: Britain’s Sixty-Year Campaign Against the Atlantic Slave Trade,“ International Organization, 1999, 53(4) 631-668.

Clare Midgley, “Slave Sugar Boycotts, Female Activism and the Domestic Base of  British Anti-Slavery Campaign,” Slavery and Abolition, 1996, 17(3), 137-62.

David Ryden, “Does Decline Make Sense? The West Indian Economy and the Abolition of the British Slave Trade,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2001, 31(3) 347-374.

Henrice Altink, “Slavery by Another Name: Apprenticed Women in Jamaican Workhouses in the Period, 1834-8,” Social History,  2001, 26(1), 40-59.

Seymour Drescher, “Abolitionist Expectations,” in Howard Temperley, ed., After Slavery, 41-66.

Stanley Engerman, “Comparative Approaches to the Ending of Slavery,” Slavery and Abolition, 2000, 21(2), 281-300.

Pieter Emmer, “Freedman and Asian Indentured Laborers in the Post-Emancipation Caribbean, 1834-1917, in Howard Temperley, ed., After Slavery, 150-168.

Janet Ewald, “Crossers of the Sea: Slaves, Freedman, and Other Migrants in the Northwestern Indian Ocean, c. 1750-1914,” American Historical Review, 2000, 105(1) 69-91.

Leon Fink, “From Autonomy to Abundance: Changing Beliefs About the Free Labor System in 19th century America,” in Stanley Engerman, ed., Terms of Labor, 116-136.

Jim Hagen and Robert Castle, “Settlers and the State: The Creation of an Aboriginal Workforce in Austrialia,” Aboriginal History, 1998 (22), 24-35.

Zine Magubane, “Labour Laws and Stereotypes: Images of Khoikhoi in the Cape in the Age of Abolition,” South African Historical Journal, 1996 (35) 115-134.

Christopher Schmidt-Nowara, “Spanish Cuba: Race and Class in Spanish and Cuban Anti-Slavery Ideology,” Cuban Studies, 25 1995, 101-122.

Rebecca Scott, “Defining the Boundaries of Freedom in the World of Cane: Cuba, Brazil and Lousiana after Emancipation,” American Historical Review, 99(1), 1994 70-102.


 
 
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