Colin A. Palmer 
Freedom’s Children [EPUB ebook] 
The 1938 Labor Rebellion and the Birth of Modern Jamaica

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Freedom’s Children is the first comprehensive history of Jamaica’s watershed 1938 labor rebellion and its aftermath. Colin Palmer argues that, a hundred years after the abolition of slavery, Jamaica’s disgruntled workers challenged the oppressive status quo and forced a morally ossified British colonial society to recognize their grievances. The rebellion produced two rival leaders who dominated the political life of the colony through the achievement of independence in 1962. Alexander Bustamante, a moneylender, founded the Bustamante Industrial Trade Union and its progeny, the Jamaica Labour Party. Norman Manley, an eminent barrister, led the struggle for self-government and with others established the People’s National Party.
Palmer describes the ugly underside of British colonialism and details the persecution of Jamaican nationalists. He sheds new light on the nature of Bustamante’s collaboration with the imperial regime, the rise of the trade-union movement, the struggle for constitutional change, and the emergence of party politics in a modernizing Jamaica.

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About the author

Colin A. Palmer was a leading historian of the Caribbean and the African diaspora. Freedom’s Children joins Palmer’s Eric Williams and the Making of the Modern Caribbean and Cheddi Jagan and the Politics of Power in chronicling the history of the Caribbean in the wake of British and U.S. imperialism.

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Language English ● Format EPUB ● Pages 432 ● ISBN 9781469611709 ● File size 1.7 MB ● Publisher The University of North Carolina Press ● City Chapel Hill ● Country US ● Published 2014 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 5509550 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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