Surviving slavery: oppression and social rebirth in the urban British Atlantic, 1680-1807

Author(s)Dickinson, Michael Lawrence
Date Accessioned2023-08-21T23:01:50Z
Date Available2023-08-21T23:01:50Z
Publication Date2017
SWORD Update2022-03-15T13:02:38Z
AbstractThe project examines the formation of enslaved black societies in the urban British Atlantic. Captives formed societies while holding onto memories of their homeland constituting a process of social rebirth. It was through social rebirth that bondspeople were able to avoid social death, despite pervasive dehumanization. How did enslaved families and communities act as resources for social and physical survival in Anglo-American cities? And how did these cities act as sites of captive oppression and subjugation? These are the questions central to the study. The lived experiences of bondspeople in mainland and Caribbean port cities are used as windows into the complexities of social rebirth. The project begins with the expansion of slavery in British America and concludes with the abolition of the Atlantic slave trade. Analyzing the process of social rebirth in early cities reveals the brutality of urban bondage and the remarkable resiliency of urban bondspeople.
AdvisorDunbar, Erica Armstrong
AdvisorMaloba, Wunyabari
DegreePh.D.
DepartmentUniversity of Delaware, Department of History
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.58088/r83n-9h17
Unique Identifier1443780081
URLhttps://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/33153
Languageen
PublisherUniversity of Delaware
KeywordsSlavery
KeywordsBritish Atlantic
KeywordsSocial rebirth
KeywordsCities
TitleSurviving slavery: oppression and social rebirth in the urban British Atlantic, 1680-1807
TypeThesis
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