Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. At the same time, the context in which the sketch was produced throws up more poignant questions about material and moral (or what we might call objective and subjective) engagement in slavery on the part of contemporaries who were not engaged directly in the slave trade or the operation of plantations, and who might live hundreds of miles from any slaving port.

  2. Jun 23, 2023 · After 1440, Iberians sailed directly to West African slave markets. After 1500, Mediterranean piracy and shipborne raiding became a major source of slaves. In this bibliography we will confine ourselves to slave trades in which European and peri-Mediterranean lands served a locus of supply, demand, and/or resale.

  3. Research on the intra-American slave trade has gained a renewed interest with publications like Greg O’Malley’s Final Passages: The Intercolonial Slave Trade of British America, 1619–1807. 96 The same could be said of the slave trade in the Indian Ocean with works like Richard Allen’s European Slave Trading in the Indian Ocean, 1500–1850. 97 One central debate that has recently been ...

  4. Jun 29, 2021 · In fact, the expansion and development of the pervasive and many-sided informal forms of slavery encountered today seem, to a large extent, to have taken place during the early modern expansion of commodified legal regimes of slavery and slave trading across the globe, especially in those environments where formal slavery occurred alongside and in interaction with existing local and informal ...

  5. Sep 29, 2017 · Structure of contributions to this collection. The essays in this collection aim at tracing intellectual, political, and literary entanglements of Germany with slave economies in the transatlantic world. The first three essays examine the economic, religious, and cultural points of contact German traders, missionaries, and immigrants had with ...

    • Heike Raphael-Hernandez, Pia Wiegmink
    • 2017
  6. The reverberations of Atlantic slavery are manifest in contemporary society in the form of racial, class, and economic disparities; the resurgence of White supremacist movements in the United States and Europe; the renewal of Black militancy and political activism (e.g., Black Lives Matter, les Indigènes de la République); claims for reparations for past wrongs; modern human trafficking; and ...

  7. People also ask

  8. The Cambridge World History of Slavery - April 2017. To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account.