Title Details
276 Pages
23.4 x 15.6 cm
12 b/w, 3 line illus.
Series: People, Markets, Goods: Economies and Societies in History
Series Vol. Number:
7
Imprint: Boydell Press
Slavery Hinterland
Transatlantic Slavery and Continental Europe, 1680-1850
- Description
- Contents
- Reviews
Contributors from the US, Britain and Europe explore a neglected aspect of transatlantic slavery: the implication of a continental European hinterland.
Slavery Hinterland explores a neglected aspect of transatlantic slavery: the implication of a continental European hinterland. It focuses on historical actors in territories that were not directly involved in the traffic inAfricans but linked in various ways with the transatlantic slave business, the plantation economies that it fed and the consequences of its abolition. The volume unearths material entanglements of the Continental and Atlantic economies and also proposes a new agenda for the historical study of the relationship between business and morality. Contributors from the US, Britain and continental Europe examine the ways in which the slave economy touched on individual lives and economic developments in German-speaking Europe, Switzerland, Denmark and Italy. They reveal how these 'hinterlands' served as suppliers of investment, labour and trade goods for the slave trade and of materials for the plantation economies, and how involvement in trade networks contributed in turn to key economic developments in the 'hinterlands'. The chapters range in time from the first, short-lived attempt at establishing a German slave-trading operation in the 1680s to the involvement of textile manufacturers in transatlantic trade in the first quarter of the nineteenth century. A key theme of the volume is the question of conscience, or awareness of being morally implicated in an immoral enterprise. Evidence for subjective understandings of the moral challenge of slavery is found in individual actions and statements and also in post-abolition colonisation and missionary projects.
FELIX BRAHM is Research Fellow at the German Historical Institute in London.
EVE ROSENHAFT is Professor of German Historical Studies, University of Liverpool.
CONTRIBUTORS: Felix Brahm, Peter Haenger, Catherine Hall, Daniel P. Hopkins, Craig Koslofsky, Sarah Lentz, Rebekka von Mallinckrodt, Anne Sophie Overkamp, Alexandra Robinson, Eve Rosenhaft, Anka Steffen, Klaus Weber, Roberto Zaugg
Slavery Hinterland explores a neglected aspect of transatlantic slavery: the implication of a continental European hinterland. It focuses on historical actors in territories that were not directly involved in the traffic inAfricans but linked in various ways with the transatlantic slave business, the plantation economies that it fed and the consequences of its abolition. The volume unearths material entanglements of the Continental and Atlantic economies and also proposes a new agenda for the historical study of the relationship between business and morality. Contributors from the US, Britain and continental Europe examine the ways in which the slave economy touched on individual lives and economic developments in German-speaking Europe, Switzerland, Denmark and Italy. They reveal how these 'hinterlands' served as suppliers of investment, labour and trade goods for the slave trade and of materials for the plantation economies, and how involvement in trade networks contributed in turn to key economic developments in the 'hinterlands'. The chapters range in time from the first, short-lived attempt at establishing a German slave-trading operation in the 1680s to the involvement of textile manufacturers in transatlantic trade in the first quarter of the nineteenth century. A key theme of the volume is the question of conscience, or awareness of being morally implicated in an immoral enterprise. Evidence for subjective understandings of the moral challenge of slavery is found in individual actions and statements and also in post-abolition colonisation and missionary projects.
FELIX BRAHM is Research Fellow at the German Historical Institute in London.
EVE ROSENHAFT is Professor of German Historical Studies, University of Liverpool.
CONTRIBUTORS: Felix Brahm, Peter Haenger, Catherine Hall, Daniel P. Hopkins, Craig Koslofsky, Sarah Lentz, Rebekka von Mallinckrodt, Anne Sophie Overkamp, Alexandra Robinson, Eve Rosenhaft, Anka Steffen, Klaus Weber, Roberto Zaugg
Introduction: Towards a Comprehensive European History of Slavery and Abolition - Felix Brahm and Eve Rosenhaft
Ship's Surgeon Johann Peter Oettinger: A Hinterlander in the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1682-1696 - Craig Koslofsky
Ship's Surgeon Johann Peter Oettinger: A Hinterlander in the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1682-1696 - Roberto Zaugg
'Citizens of the World': The Earle Family's Leghorn and Venetian Business, 1751-1808 - Alexandra Robinson
Basel and the Slave Trade: From Profiteers to Missionaries - Peter Haenger
Spinning and Weaving for the Slave Trade: Proto-Industry in Eighteenth-Century Silesia - Anka Steffen
Spinning and Weaving for the Slave Trade: Proto-Industry in Eighteenth-Century Silesia - Klaus Weber
There Are No Slaves in Prussia? - Rebekka von Mallinckrodt
Julius von Rohr, an Enlightenment Scientist of the Plantation Atlantic - Daniel P. Hopkins
A Hinterland to the Slave Trade? Atlantic Connections of the Wupper Valley in the Early Nineteenth Century - Anne Sophie Overkamp
Abolitionists in the German Hinterland? Therese Huber and the Spread of Antislavery Sentiment in the German Territories in the Early Nineteenth Century - Sarah Lentz
Afterword - Catherine M Hall
Ship's Surgeon Johann Peter Oettinger: A Hinterlander in the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1682-1696 - Craig Koslofsky
Ship's Surgeon Johann Peter Oettinger: A Hinterlander in the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1682-1696 - Roberto Zaugg
'Citizens of the World': The Earle Family's Leghorn and Venetian Business, 1751-1808 - Alexandra Robinson
Basel and the Slave Trade: From Profiteers to Missionaries - Peter Haenger
Spinning and Weaving for the Slave Trade: Proto-Industry in Eighteenth-Century Silesia - Anka Steffen
Spinning and Weaving for the Slave Trade: Proto-Industry in Eighteenth-Century Silesia - Klaus Weber
There Are No Slaves in Prussia? - Rebekka von Mallinckrodt
Julius von Rohr, an Enlightenment Scientist of the Plantation Atlantic - Daniel P. Hopkins
A Hinterland to the Slave Trade? Atlantic Connections of the Wupper Valley in the Early Nineteenth Century - Anne Sophie Overkamp
Abolitionists in the German Hinterland? Therese Huber and the Spread of Antislavery Sentiment in the German Territories in the Early Nineteenth Century - Sarah Lentz
Afterword - Catherine M Hall
"This work of charting continental Europe's complex and often subtle debts to the transatlantic slave system is an ambitious project." ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW
"The essays in this collection deserve our attention." HISTORY
"A fine example of uncovering a slave past that had been previously, sometimes deliberately, obscured." JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY
"Admirably achieves a dual purpose: offering a detailed and very specific study of unknown areas of the slave trade while providing a very good synthesis of essential questions like black agency, unfree labor, the compatibility between material interest and moral conscience, thus significantly advancing the field of research on that subject." SLAVERY & ABOLITION
"The essays reveal the ways in which central Europeans were entangled in the world that Atlantic slavery made. They unearth original data...that illustrate the extraordinary reach of transatlantic slavery." ECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW
Paperback
9781783271122
June 2016
$36.95 / £24.99
Ebook (EPDF)
9781782047032
June 2016
$9.99 / £5.99
Ebook (EPUB)
9781782048114
June 2016
$9.99 / £5.99
Title Details
276 Pages
2.34 x 1.56 cm
12 b/w, 3 line illus.
Series: People, Markets, Goods: Economies and Societies in History
Series Vol. Number:
7
Imprint: Boydell Press