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How America’s First Settlers Invented Chattel Slavery: Dehumanizing Native Americans and Africans with Language; Laws; Guns; and Religion (Berkeley Insights in Linguistics and Semiotics)

ebooks How America’s First Settlers Invented Chattel Slavery: Dehumanizing Native Americans and Africans with Language; Laws; Guns; and Religion (Berkeley Insights in Linguistics and Semiotics) by David K. O'Rourke in History

Description

This book brings back into print; for the first time since the 1830s; a text that was central to the transatlantic campaign to fully abolish slavery in Britain’s colonies. James Williams; an eighteen-year-old Jamaican “apprentice” (former slave); came to Britain in 1837 at the instigation of the abolitionist Joseph Sturge. The Narrative he produced there; one of very few autobiographical texts by Caribbean slaves or former slaves; became one of the most powerful abolitionist tools for effecting the immediate end to the system of apprenticeship that had replaced slavery. Describing the hard working conditions on plantations and the harsh treatment of apprentices unjustly incarcerated; Williams argues that apprenticeship actually worsened the conditions of Jamaican ex-slaves: former owners; no longer legally permitted to directly punish their workers; used the Jamaican legal system as a punitive lever against them. Williams’s story documents the collaboration of local magistrates in this practice; wherein apprentices were routinely jailed and beaten for both real and imaginary infractions of the apprenticeship regulations. In addition to the complete text of Williams’s original Narrative; this fully annotated edition includes nineteenth-century responses to the controversy from the British and Jamaican press; as well as extensive testimony from the Commission of Enquiry that heard evidence regarding the Narrative’s claims. These fascinating and revealing documents constitute the largest extant body of direct testimony by Caribbean slaves or apprentices.


#4245257 in Books 2004-11-01Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.50 x 6.25 x .75l; .0 #File Name: 0820468142210 pages


Review
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful. One of the few to dig so deep into this dark chapter.By TODD PRATUMI tried to get a copy from the author when I met him by chance at my stillborn bookshop in Point Richmond; now I see why he couldn't get me one; its published by Peter Lang! That means it will never enter a bookshop; not that many shops would want to carry a book like this. But now that I do have a copy; (the purchase inspired by the Pope's imminent canonization of Serra) I wish I had read it earlier. I was first initiated into this dar subject by reading Beard and Carranco's Genocide Vendetta; but this book goes much deeper into the Native holocaust and its theological and cultural sources. I can't recommend it higher. Very few books dig this deep and are so unafraid to lay blame where it belongs. What is the Pope thinking?

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