Transatlantic Slavery: Against Human DignityAnthony Tibbles Liverpool University Press, 2005 - Всего страниц: 180 Between about 1500 and about 1870, European traders transported millions of Africans across the Atlantic to work as slaves in the Americas. The enslaved were shipped in conditions of great cruelty to lead lives of hard unremitting labour, subject to degradation and violence. The products of their labour - primarily sugar, coffee and tobacco - were brought back to Europe and the profits derived from slavery helped to fuel European economic development in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The cost in human lives and suffering was enormous. But transatlantic slavery is not just a historical tragedy. Though there may be disagreement and controversy about the consequences, it changed the history of all three continents - Africa, America and Europe. All of us live live with its legacy. This book was originally published to accompany the opening of 'Transatlantic Slavery: Against Human Dignity', a new gallery at Merseyside Maritime Museum, Liverpool, in 1994. As National Museums Liverpool prepares to develop a new National Museum and Centre for the Understanding of Transatlantic Slavery, it is an appropriate moment to publish a second edition of this book, which has been in constant demand. The opportunity has been taken to include two additional essays which provide a context for new development. -- Publisher's description. |
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Стр. 62
... enslaved men . While men were confined to the hold of the ship at almost all times , women were often allowed to remain above decks , sometimes without the shackles which bound the men day and night . The women's relative freedom of ...
... enslaved men . While men were confined to the hold of the ship at almost all times , women were often allowed to remain above decks , sometimes without the shackles which bound the men day and night . The women's relative freedom of ...
Стр. 64
... enslaved Africans ; none of them was done by women . Those who escaped field work , with the exception of a small number of domestic workers , were all men . So while some men could elude the monotony and hardship of the field , almost ...
... enslaved Africans ; none of them was done by women . Those who escaped field work , with the exception of a small number of domestic workers , were all men . So while some men could elude the monotony and hardship of the field , almost ...
Стр. 65
... Enslaved women were freed as a result of their association with slave - owners , or when female children , who were ... enslaved . By rewarding military service , slave - owners encouraged the enslaved to identify themselves with those ...
... Enslaved women were freed as a result of their association with slave - owners , or when female children , who were ... enslaved . By rewarding military service , slave - owners encouraged the enslaved to identify themselves with those ...
Содержание
Foreword | 7 |
Introduction | 13 |
Enslavement and the Middle Passage | 25 |
Авторские права | |
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Transatlantic Slavery: Against Human Dignity Anthony Tibbles,Anthony H. Tibbles Ограниченный просмотр - 2005 |
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19th century abolition abolitionists African slaves African societies African women Americas areas Asante Atlantic slave trade Barbados became Benin black community Britain British captives Caribbean chattel slavery colour continued Diaspora dominated Dutch early economic eighteenth century empire English enslaved Africans enslaved women established Europe European example exhibition exploitation exports female slaves freedom Ghana Gold History human illus impact important Indian islands Jamaica John King labour legacy of slavery Liverpool slave lives London masters merchants Merseyside Maritime Museum Middle Passage National Maritime Museum Negro nineteenth century NML Merseyside Maritime NML Walker Art NML World Museum Obverse Olaudah Equiano owners plantation planters political population port Portuguese race racial racism racist ideologies Reparations resistance revolt role sails seventeenth century sexual sixteenth century slave ships slavery and colonialism social South Spanish sugar transatlantic slave trade vessels voyages Walker Art Gallery Walvin West Africa West Indies William World Museum Liverpool
Ссылки на эту книгу
Chords of Freedom: Commemoration, Ritual and British Transatlantic Slavery J. R. Oldfield Недоступно для просмотра - 2007 |
Bound for America: The Forced Migration of Africans to the New World James Haskins,Kathleen Benson Ограниченный просмотр - 1999 |