Newly available in paperback, this edition is an important volume of international significance, drawing together contributions from some of the leading scholars in the field and edited by a team headed by the acclaimed historian David Richardson. The book sets Liverpool in the wider context of transatlantic slavery and addresses issues in the scholarship of transatlantic slavery, including African agency and trade experience. Emphasis is placed on the human characteristics and impacts of transatlantic slavery. It also opens up new areas of debate on Liverpool's participation in the slave trade and helps to frame the research agenda for the future.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Liverpool and the Transatlantic Slave Trade will be undoubtedly of use to anyone who has more than a passing interest in the role the African slave trade played in developing one of the Atlantic World's most prominent ports. * African History, Volume 49 * This is a book of substance that offers both new insights and information, and which, at its best, contextualizes the city in its regional and its global context. As such, it enriches our understanding both of Liverpool's and Britain's involvement in the transatlantic slave system. * H-Net Reviews * What Liverpool and Transatlantic Slavery offers is a close, careful and highly quantitative analysis of the multiple factors that contributed to Liverpool's ascendancy in turn shaped attitudes and aspirations both abroad and at home. * International Journal of African Historical Studies, Volume 41, Number 2 * ... anyone seeking a clear, balanced and thoughtful presentation of the issues surrounding one of the most shameful episodes of human history could not do better than to arm themselves with a copy of this absorbing and well-edited book. * Urban History Volume 35/3 * The volume is recommended to researchers and students interested in better understanding Liverpool's place in the history of British slavery and the slave trade. * The Journal of African American History * This book is an important addition to the rapidly growing literature on the Atlantic slave trade. * American Historical Review *
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Maße
Höhe: 239 mm
Breite: 163 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-84631-066-9 (9781846310669)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Anthony Tibbles is Emeritus Keeper of Slavery History, National Museums Liverpool.
Herausgeber*in
Department of History, Institute of Humanities & Creative Arts, University of Worcester (United Kingdom)
Foreword
DAVID FLEMING
Advisory Committee and Curators
Foreword to First Edition
SIR PETER MOORES
Introduction
ANTHONY TIBBLES
The Rise of the Atlantic Empires
DAVID RICHARDSON
Human Cargoes: Enslavement and the Middle Passage
EDWARD REYNOLDS
'Guineamen': Some Technical Aspects of Slave Ships
M. K. STAMMERS
African Resistance to Enslavement
STEPHEN SMALL AND JAMES WALVIN
Caribbean Slave Society
ALISSANDRA CUMMINS
Women in Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade
JENNIFER LYLE MORGAN
Liverpool and the English Slave Trade
DAVID RICHARDSON
Oil not Slaves: Liverpool and West Africa after 1807
ANTHONYTIBBLES
Black People in Britain
JAMES WALVIN
British Abolitionism 1787-1838
JAMES WALVIN
The Impact of the Slave Trade on the Societies of West and Central Africa
PATRICK MANNING
An African View of Transatlantic Slavery and the Role of Oral Testimony in Creating a New Legacy
MARY E. MODUPE KOLAWOLE
Racist Ideologies
STEPHEN SMALL
On the Meaning and History of Slavery
PRESTON KING
The General Legacy of the Atlantic Slave Trade
STEPHEN SMALL
The Challenge of Remembering Slavery
LONNIE G. BUNCH
Interpreting Transatlantic Slavery: The Role of Museums
ANTHONY TIBBLES
Catalogue
Select Bibliography
Photographic Credits
Index