The Making of New World Slavery
Robin Blackburn's mighty tome talces readers on a historical journey through three hundred years of colonial slavery in the New World. As one travels through Europe, Africa, and the Americas, one meets a wide range of characters: slaves, slave traders, merchants, seamen, national navies and ar...
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International Institute of Islamic Thought
1999
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oai:doaj.org-article:cf9b36a0e7324c369c7272179d150a952021-12-02T19:22:41ZThe Making of New World Slavery10.35632/ajis.v16i3.21102690-37332690-3741https://doaj.org/article/cf9b36a0e7324c369c7272179d150a951999-10-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/2110https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3733https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3741 Robin Blackburn's mighty tome talces readers on a historical journey through three hundred years of colonial slavery in the New World. As one travels through Europe, Africa, and the Americas, one meets a wide range of characters: slaves, slave traders, merchants, seamen, national navies and armies, free and indentured laborers, planters, national leaders, and government officials, all of whom have a part to play that is duly examined by the author. The author has drawn on a very wide variety of sow-ces: American, British, Dutch, French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Latin texts, ranging from the texts of antiquity to those of the late twentieth century. Some useful maps of the period are included, as well as infonnative illustrations and many tables of economic and demographic surveys of the colonies. The detailed notes provide helpful signposts to readers wishing to pursue certain aspects of slavery and related topics in greater depth. The book comprises twelve chapters as well as an introduction, an epilogue, and a comprehensive index. In the Introduction, the author describes the book as "an account of the making of the European systems of colonial slavery in the Americas" (p. 3). The author attempts to show its role in the advent of modernity and to examine slavery in its historical perspective as an ever-present reality. Indeed, slavery existed from the earliest of times and was accepted as part of life by the Greek and Roman civilizations and later by Christianity. The main justification for slavery was difference - implying inferiority -which could be derived from ethnicity, color, social status, genealogy, or criminal behavior. Prisoners of war were also frequently enslaved ... Sylvia J. HuntInternational Institute of Islamic ThoughtarticleIslamBP1-253ENAmerican Journal of Islam and Society, Vol 16, Iss 3 (1999) |
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Islam BP1-253 Sylvia J. Hunt The Making of New World Slavery |
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Robin Blackburn's mighty tome talces readers on a historical journey through
three hundred years of colonial slavery in the New World. As one travels through
Europe, Africa, and the Americas, one meets a wide range of characters: slaves,
slave traders, merchants, seamen, national navies and armies, free and indentured
laborers, planters, national leaders, and government officials, all of whom have a
part to play that is duly examined by the author. The author has drawn on a very
wide variety of sow-ces: American, British, Dutch, French, Spanish, Portuguese,
and Latin texts, ranging from the texts of antiquity to those of the late twentieth
century. Some useful maps of the period are included, as well as infonnative illustrations
and many tables of economic and demographic surveys of the colonies.
The detailed notes provide helpful signposts to readers wishing to pursue certain
aspects of slavery and related topics in greater depth. The book comprises twelve
chapters as well as an introduction, an epilogue, and a comprehensive index.
In the Introduction, the author describes the book as "an account of the making
of the European systems of colonial slavery in the Americas" (p. 3). The author
attempts to show its role in the advent of modernity and to examine slavery in its
historical perspective as an ever-present reality. Indeed, slavery existed from the
earliest of times and was accepted as part of life by the Greek and Roman civilizations
and later by Christianity. The main justification for slavery was difference -
implying inferiority -which could be derived from ethnicity, color, social status,
genealogy, or criminal behavior. Prisoners of war were also frequently enslaved ...
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format |
article |
author |
Sylvia J. Hunt |
author_facet |
Sylvia J. Hunt |
author_sort |
Sylvia J. Hunt |
title |
The Making of New World Slavery |
title_short |
The Making of New World Slavery |
title_full |
The Making of New World Slavery |
title_fullStr |
The Making of New World Slavery |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Making of New World Slavery |
title_sort |
making of new world slavery |
publisher |
International Institute of Islamic Thought |
publishDate |
1999 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/cf9b36a0e7324c369c7272179d150a95 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT sylviajhunt themakingofnewworldslavery AT sylviajhunt makingofnewworldslavery |
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1718376705078329344 |