Sheds new light on both pro and antislavery politics in the nineteenth-century Americas.
The creation of new frontiers of slave commodity production and the expansion and intensification of slavery in Brazil, Cuba, and the southern United States were an integral part of the expansion of the world economy during the nineteenth century. Beginning from this vantage point, The Politics of the Second Slavery brings together a group of international scholars to reinterpret pro- and antislavery politics both globally and nationally as part of the forces that were restructuring Atlantic slavery. Individual chapters shed new light on the decolonization and nationalization of slavery in the Americas, the politics of proslavery elites both within particular countries and across the Atlantic region, the abolition of the international slave trade, and slave resistance.
قائمة المحتويات
Introduction
Dale W. Tomich
Civilizing America’s Shore: British World-Economic Hegemony and the Abolition of the International Slave Trade (1814–1867)
Dale W. Tomich
International Proslavery: The Politics of the Second Slavery
Rafael Marquese and Tâmis Parron
Spain and the Politics of the Second Slavery, 1808–1868
Christopher Schmidt-Nowara
The Return to the casa de vivienda and the barracón: The Terms of Social Action in Slave Plantations
José Antonio Piqueras
The Paths of Freedom: Autonomism and Abolitionism in Cuba, 1878–1886
Luís Miguel García Mora
Passive Revolution and the Politics of Second Slavery in the Brazilian Empire
Ricardo Salles
The Contraband Slave Trade of the Second Slavery
Leonardo Marques
Spaces of Rebellion: Plantations, Farms, and Churches in Demerara and Southampton, Virginia
Anthony E. Kaye
The American Civil War, Emancipation, and Nation-Building: A Comparative Perspective
Enrico Dal Lago
Contributors
Index
عن المؤلف
Dale W. Tomich is Professor of Sociology at Binghamton University, State University of New York. He is the author of Slavery in the Circuit of Sugar, Second Edition: Martinique and the World-Economy, 1830–1848 and the editor of The Politics of the Second Slavery, both also published by SUNY Press.