ECU Libraries Catalog

The American crucible : slavery, emancipation and human rights / Robin Blackburn.

Author/creator Blackburn, Robin
Format Book and Print
Publication InfoLondon ; New York : Verso, 2011.
Description498 pages, 4 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
Subject(s)
Contents Zones of slave-based development and of slave resistance, c. 1770 -- Slavery and the West. Slavery and human history -- Empires and Plantations. The Spanish conquest: destruction, enslavement and the Baroque ; Mercantile empire and the slave plantation: Brazil leads, the Dutch, English and French refine the formula ; Plantation hierarchy, social order and the Atlantic system -- The Subversive Boom. Slavery and industrialization ; Black aspirations and the 'Picaresque Proletariat' ; The planters back colonial revolt ; From the critique of slavery to the abolitionist movement -- The Haitian Pivot. Haitians claim the rights of man ; Results and prospects I: slave-trade abolition ; Results and prospects II: Latin America -- The Age of Abolition. Abolitionism advances, but slavery is resurgent ; Anti-slavery: its scope, character and appeal ; The keys to emancipation ; The spiral path : ambiguous victories, contested legacies.
Abstract This book is a history of the rise and abolition of slavery in the Americas and covers such topics as the plantation revolution of the seventeenth century, the emergence of anti-slavery thought, and the contributions of such figures as Thomas Paine and Frederick Douglass. A history of the rise, abolition, and legacy of slavery in the New World, this book furnishes a view of slavery and emancipation in the Americas from the conquests and colonization of the sixteenth century to the "century of abolition" that stretched from 1780 to 1888. Tracing the diverse responses of African captives, it argues that while slave rebels and abolitionists made real gains, they also suffered cruel setbacks and disappointments, leading to a momentous radicalization of the discourse of human rights. In it, the author explains the emergence of ferocious systems of racial exploitation while rejecting the comforting myths that portray emancipation as somehow already inscribed in the institutions and ideas that allowed for, or even fostered, racial slavery in the first place, whether the logic of the market, the teachings of religion, or the spirit of nationalism. Rather, the author stresses, American slavery was novel, and so too were the originality and achievement of the anti-slavery alliances which eventually destroyed it. The Americas became the crucible for a succession of fateful experiments in colonization, silver mining, plantation agriculture, racial enslavement and emancipation. The exotic commodities produced by the slave plantations helped to transform Europe and North America, raising up empires and stimulating industrial revolution and "market revolution" to bring about the pervasive commodification of polite society, work and everyday life in parts of Europe and North America. Fees, salaries and wages fostered consuming habits so that capitalism, based on free wage labor in the metropolis, became intimately dependent on racial slavery in the New World. But by the late eighteenth century the Atlantic boom had sown far and wide the seeds of subversion, provoking colonial rebellion, slave conspiracy and popular revolt, the aspirations of a new black peasantry and "picaresque proletariat", and the emergence of a revolutionary doctrine: the "rights of man". The result was a radicalization of the principles of the Enlightenment, with the Haitian Revolution rescuing and reshaping the ideals memorably proclaimed by the American and French revolutions. The author charts the gradual emergence of an ability and willingness to see the human cost of the heedless consumerism and to challenge it. The anti-slavery idea, he argues, brought together diverse impulses, the "free air" doctrine maintained by the common people of Europe, the critique of the philosophes and the urgency of slave resistance and black witness. The anti-slavery idea made gains thanks to a succession of historic upheavals. But the remaining slave systems, in the U.S. South, Cuba and Brazil, were in many ways as strong as ever. They were only overturned thanks to the momentous clashes unleashed by the American Civil War, Cuba's fight for independence and the terminal crisis of the Brazilian Empire.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
LCCN 2011282161
ISBN9781844675692
ISBN1844675696

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner General Stacks HT1048 .B558 2011 ✔ Available Place Hold