Invoking Slavery In The Eighteenth Century British Imagination

eBook Download

BOOK EXCERPT:

In the eighteenth century, audiences in Great Britain understood the term ’slavery’ to refer to a range of physical and metaphysical conditions beyond the transatlantic slave trade. Literary representations of slavery encompassed tales of Barbary captivity, the ’exotic’ slaving practices of the Ottoman Empire, the political enslavement practiced by government or church, and even the harsh life of servants under a cruel master. Arguing that literary and cultural studies have focused too narrowly on slavery as a term that refers almost exclusively to the race-based chattel enslavement of sub-Saharan Africans transported to the New World, the contributors suggest that these analyses foreclose deeper discussion of other associations of the term. They suggest that the term slavery became a powerful rhetorical device for helping British audiences gain a new perspective on their own position with respect to their government and the global sphere. Far from eliding the real and important differences between slave systems operating in the Atlantic world, this collection is a starting point for understanding how slavery as a concept came to encompass many forms of unfree labor and metaphorical bondage precisely because of the power of association.

Product Details :

Genre : Literary Criticism
Author : Srividhya Swaminathan
Publisher : Routledge
Release : 2016-05-06
File : 240 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781317112983


Invoking Slavery In The Eighteenth Century British Imagination

eBook Download

BOOK EXCERPT:

In the eighteenth century, audiences in Great Britain understood the term ’slavery’ to refer to a range of physical and metaphysical conditions beyond the transatlantic slave trade. Literary representations of slavery encompassed tales of Barbary captivity, the ’exotic’ slaving practices of the Ottoman Empire, the political enslavement practiced by government or church, and even the harsh life of servants under a cruel master. Arguing that literary and cultural studies have focused too narrowly on slavery as a term that refers almost exclusively to the race-based chattel enslavement of sub-Saharan Africans transported to the New World, the contributors suggest that these analyses foreclose deeper discussion of other associations of the term. They suggest that the term slavery became a powerful rhetorical device for helping British audiences gain a new perspective on their own position with respect to their government and the global sphere. Far from eliding the real and important differences between slave systems operating in the Atlantic world, this collection is a starting point for understanding how slavery as a concept came to encompass many forms of unfree labor and metaphorical bondage precisely because of the power of association.

Product Details :

Genre : Literary Criticism
Author : Srividhya Swaminathan
Publisher : Routledge
Release : 2016-05-06
File : 228 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781317112990


Invoking Slavery In The Eighteenth Century British Imagination

eBook Download

BOOK EXCERPT:

Product Details :

Genre : English literature
Author : Srividhya Swaminathan
Publisher :
Release : 2013
File : 215 Pages
ISBN-13 : 1315589788


Familial Feeling

eBook Download

BOOK EXCERPT:

This open access book discusses British literature as part of a network of global entangled modernities and shared aesthetic concerns, departing from the retrospective model of a postcolonial “writing back” to the centre. Accordingly, the narrative strategies in the texts of early Black Atlantic authors, like Equiano, Sancho, Wedderburn, and Seacole, and British canonical novelists, such as Defoe, Sterne, Austen, and Dickens, are framed as entangled tonalities. Via their engagement with discourses on slavery, abolition, and imperialism, these texts shaped an understanding of national belonging as a form of familial feeling. This study thus complicates the “rise of the novel” framework and British middle-class identity formation from a transnational perspective combining approaches in narrative studies with postcolonial and queer theory.

Product Details :

Genre : Literary Criticism
Author : Elahe Haschemi Yekani
Publisher : Springer Nature
Release : 2020-12-07
File : 301 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9783030586416


Slavery And The Making Of Early American Libraries

eBook Download

BOOK EXCERPT:

Early American libraries stood at the nexus of two transatlantic branches of commerce—the book trade and the slave trade. Slavery and the Making of Early American Libraries bridges the study of these trades by demonstrating how Americans' profits from slavery were reinvested in imported British books and providing evidence that the colonial book market was shaped, in part, by the demand of slave owners for metropolitan cultural capital. Drawing on recent scholarship that shows how participation in London cultural life was very expensive in the eighteenth century, as well as evidence that enslavers were therefore some of the few early Americans who could afford to import British cultural products, the volume merges the fields of the history of the book, Atlantic studies, and the study of race, arguing that the empire-wide circulation of British books was underwritten by the labour of the African diaspora. The volume is the first in early American and eighteenth-century British studies to fuse our growing understanding of the material culture of the transatlantic text with our awareness of slavery as an economic and philanthropic basis for the production and consumption of knowledge. In studying the American dissemination of works of British literature and political thought, it claims that Americans were seeking out the forms of citizenship, constitutional traditions, and rights that were the signature of that British identity. Even though they were purchasing the sovereignty of Anglo-Americans at the expense of African-Americans through these books, however, some colonials were also making the case for the abolition of slavery.

Product Details :

Genre : Literary Criticism
Author : Sean D. Moore
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Release : 2019-02-07
File : 310 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9780192573414


Before Equiano

eBook Download

BOOK EXCERPT:

In the antebellum United States, formerly enslaved men and women who told their stories and advocated for abolition helped establish a new genre with widely recognized tropes: the slave narrative. This book investigates how enslaved black Africans conceived of themselves and their stories before the War of American Independence and the genre's development in the nineteenth century. Zachary McLeod Hutchins argues that colonial newspapers were pivotal in shaping popular understandings of both slavery and the black African experience well before the slave narrative's proliferation. Introducing the voices and art of black Africans long excluded from the annals of literary history, Hutchins shows how the earliest life writing by and about enslaved black Africans established them as political agents in an Atlantic world defined by diplomacy, war, and foreign relations. In recovering their stories, Hutchins sheds new light on how black Africans became Black Americans; how the earliest accounts of enslaved life were composed editorially from textual fragments rather than authored by a single hand; and how the public discourse of slavery shifted from the language of just wars and foreign policy to a heritable, race-based system of domestic oppression.

Product Details :

Genre : Social Science
Author : Zachary McLeod Hutchins
Publisher : UNC Press Books
Release : 2022-12-06
File : 307 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781469671550


Slavery On The British West India Plantations In The Eighteenth Century

eBook Download

BOOK EXCERPT:

Product Details :

Genre : Plantation life
Author : Frank Wesley Pitman
Publisher :
Release : 1926
File : 102 Pages
ISBN-13 : UVA:X000885386


America In The British Imagination

eBook Download

BOOK EXCERPT:

No other region of the world has exerted such a fascination for the British, and for such a long time, as the United States of America. From the first explorations and settlements in the seventeenth century, through the heyday of the first British empire in the Americas in the eighteenth century and the fundamental re-conceptualisation of America following independence, to the present day American global hegemony a vast variety of Britons have looked across the Atlantic and pondered on American life, culture, politics and attitudes. In this volume a number of scholars from a variety of different disciplines (History, English, Theatre Studies, Music and History of Art) explore the ways in which Britons have imagined America. They show how some visited America themselves, while others relied on second-hand reports, but all engaged with America on various levels, often imagining and re-imagining it through different time-periods. The â ~realityâ (TM) of American life, or of American politics was one issue, as were other factors including American identity, culture, music and theatre, all of which were filtered through a shifting gaze ranging from admiration to outright hostility Included are essays on the printed representations of early Virginia, the view of British consuls living in the slave South, the interpretations of diverse writers such as Dickens, Auden, Orwell and Amis, and on the lyrics and other public pronouncements of the band Radiohead. The time frame runs from the seventeenth to the twenty-first century, and should enable the reader the see how British perceptions and understandings of America have evolved over those 400 years. Ultimately, the complexity and ambiguity of British imaginings of America emerges as the central theme of the book.

Product Details :

Genre : Science
Author : Catherine Armstrong
Publisher :
Release : 2007
File : 356 Pages
ISBN-13 : STANFORD:36105124086013


Mla International Bibliography Of Books And Articles On The Modern Languages And Literatures

eBook Download

BOOK EXCERPT:

Product Details :

Genre : Languages, Modern
Author :
Publisher :
Release : 2007
File : 2426 Pages
ISBN-13 : PSU:000057121345


London Calling How Black And Asian Writers Imagined A City

eBook Download

BOOK EXCERPT:

From the 11th-century, when one commentator claimed the capital was being overrun with Moors, to the garage MCs and street poets of today – this book tells the story of life in London for black and Asian people from the 17th-century until today.

Product Details :

Genre : Social Science
Author : Sukhdev Sandhu
Publisher : HarperCollins UK
Release : 2014-02-06
File : 462 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9780007397495