Monsoon rains, winds, and currents have shaped patterns of production and exchange in the Indian Ocean world (IOW) for centuries. Consequently, as this volume demonstrates, the environment has also played a central role in determining the region’s systems of bondage and human trafficking. Contributors trace intricate links between environmental forces, human suffering, and political conditions, examining how they have driven people into servile labour and shaped the IOW economy. They illuminate the complexities of IOW bondage with case studies, drawn chiefly from the mid-eighteenth century, on Sudan, Cape Colony, Réunion, China, and beyond, where chattel slavery (as seen in the Atlantic world) represented only one extreme of a wide spectrum of systems of unfree labour. The array of factors examined here, including climate change, environmental disaster, disease, and market forces, are central to IOW history—and to modern-day forms of human bondage.
Table des matières
1. Introduction: Bondage and the Environment in the Indian Ocean World.- 2. Abolition in the Midst of Turmoil: The Case of Tan Emperor Wu Zong (814-846 CE).- 3. Environment and Enslavement in Highland Madagascar, 1500-1750: The Case for the Swahili Slave Export Trade Reassessed.- 4. Volcanoes, Refugees and Raiders: The 1765 Macaturin Eruption and the Rise of the Iranun.- 5. The Environment and Slave Resistance in the Cape Colony.- 6. A Local View on Global Climate and Migration Patterns: The Impact of Cyclones and Drought on the Routier Family and their Slaves in Ile Bourbon (La Réunion), 1770-1820.- 7. The Cyclone, the Meteorologist, the Planter and the Indentured Immigrant. The Strange Story of Selective Cyclone Damage in Reunion Island, 1840s-1870s.- 8. Egypt’s Slaving Frontier: Environment, Enslavement, Social Transformations and the Local Use of Slaves in Sudan, 1780-1880.- 9. Environmental Knowledge and Resistance by Slave Transporters in the Nineteenth-Century Western Indian Ocean.- 10. Environmental Disaster in Eastern Bengal: Colonial Capitalism and Rural Labour Force Formation in the Late Nineteenth Century.- 11. Famine and Slavery in Africa’s Red Sea World, 1887-1914.
A propos de l’auteur
Gwyn Campbell is Canada Research Chair and Founding Director of the Indian Ocean World Centre at Mc Gill University, Canada. He is also the editor of the
Palgrave Series in Indian Ocean World Studies, the founder and editor-in-chief of the
Journal of Indian Ocean World Studies, and a recipient of the Humboldt Research Award (2017-2019).