This book re-examines the relationship between Britain and colonial slavery in a crucial period in the birth of modern Britain. Drawing on a comprehensive analysis of British slave-owners and mortgagees who received compensa...

Buy Now From Amazon

This book re-examines the relationship between Britain and colonial slavery in a crucial period in the birth of modern Britain. Drawing on a comprehensive analysis of British slave-owners and mortgagees who received compensation from the state for the end of slavery, and tracing their trajectories in British life, the volume explores the commercial, political, cultural, social, intellectual, physical and imperial legacies of slave-ownership. It transcends conventional divisions in history-writing to provide an integrated account of one powerful way in which Empire came home to Victorian Britain, and to reassess narratives of West Indian 'decline'. It will be of value to scholars not only of British economic and social history, but also of the histories of the Atlantic world, of the Caribbean and of slavery, as well as to those concerned with the evolution of ideas of race and difference and with the relationship between past and present.

Similar Products

Distant Strangers: How Britain Became Modern (Berkeley Series in British Studies)Housewives and citizens: Domesticity and the women's movement in England, 1928-64 (Gender in History MUP)City of Dreadful Delight: Narratives of Sexual Danger in Late-Victorian London (Women in Culture and Society)Afterlife of Empire (Berkeley Series in British Studies)Doughboys on the Great War: How American Soldiers Viewed Their Military Experience (Modern War Studies (Paperback))Britain's War Machine: Weapons, Resources, and Experts in the Second World WarThe Last Great War: British Society and the First World WarLondon and the Culture of Homosexuality, 1885-1914 (Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture)