Slave Empire - How Slavery Built Modern Britain

Author(s): Padraic X. Scanlan

History

In intimate, human detail, Slave Empire shows how Britain's empire was built on sugar, tobacco and coffee plantations worked by enslaved African labourers and their descendants. With original research and synthesis of new scholarship, it explores two clashing visions of the British empire after emancipation. To abolitionist leaders in Britain, the end of slavery would usher in cheap wage labour on plantations and new missions to 'civilise' the formerly enslaved. To freedpeople, emancipation meant liberation and autonomy. There was no bright line between the brutality of plantation labour and the 'civilisation' that the empire promised to its subjects. Antislavery laws and policies dissolved colonial slavery but preserved white supremacy. And as freedom - free elections, free labour, free trade - became a watchword in the Victorian era, the British empire was still sustained by the labour of enslaved people, in the United States, Cuba and elsewhere. Modern Britain has inherited the legacies and contradictions of a liberal empire built on slavery. Modern capitalism and liberalism emphasise 'freedom' - for individuals and for markets - but are built on human bondage. Book jacket.

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Product Information

Padraic Scanlan's previous book, Freedom's Debtors: British Antislavery in Sierra Leone in the Age of Revolution, was awarded the 2018 James A. Rawley Prize by the American Historical Association and the 2018 Wallace K. Ferguson Prize by the Canadian Historical Association. 

General Fields

  • : 9781472142337
  • : Little, Brown Book Group Limited
  • : Sphere
  • : 0.3
  • : 28 February 2022
  • : 2.2 Centimeters X 12.6 Centimeters X 19.8 Centimeters
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : 464
  • : 306.362094109033
  • : English
  • : 1
  • : Paperback
  • : Padraic X. Scanlan