Slaves and Highlanders
Title | Slaves and Highlanders PDF eBook |
Author | David Alston |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2021 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9781474427319 |
Explores the prominent role of Highland Scots in the slavery industry of the cotton, sugar and coffee plantations of the 18th and 19th centuries. Longlisted for the 2021 Highland Book Prize.
Slaves and Highlanders
Title | Slaves and Highlanders PDF eBook |
Author | David Alston |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2021 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9781474427302 |
Explores the prominent role of Highland Scots in the slavery industry of the cotton, sugar and coffee plantations of the 18th and 19th centuries. Longlisted for the 2021 Highland Book Prize.
Recovering Scotland's Slavery Past
Title | Recovering Scotland's Slavery Past PDF eBook |
Author | Tom M. Devine |
Publisher | Edinburgh University Press |
Pages | 386 |
Release | 2015-09-17 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1474408818 |
For more than a century and a half the real story of Scotlands connections to transatlantic slavery has been lost to history and shrouded in myth. There was even denial that the Scots unlike the English had any significant involvement in slavery .Scotland saw itself as a pioneering abolitionist nation untainted by a slavery past.This book is the first detailed attempt to challenge these beliefs.Written by the foremost scholars in the field , with findings based on sustained archival research, the volume systematically peels away the mythology and radically revises the traditional picture.In doing so the contributors come to a number of surprising conclusions. Topics covered include national amnesia and slavery,the impact of profits from slavery on Scotland, Scots in the Caribbean sugar islands ,compensation paid to Scottish owners when slavery was abolished,domestic controversies on the slave trade,the role of Scots in slave trading from English ports and much else. The book is a major contribution to Scottish history,to studies of the Scots global diaspora and to the history of slavery within the British Empire.It will have wide appeal not only to scholars and students but to all readers interested in discovering an untold aspect of Scotlands past.
The Sulu Zone, 1768-1898
Title | The Sulu Zone, 1768-1898 PDF eBook |
Author | James Francis Warren |
Publisher | NUS Press |
Pages | 452 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9789971693862 |
"First published in 1981, ""The Sulu Zone"" has become a classic in the field of Southeast Asian History. The book deals with a fascinating geographical, cultural and historical ""border zone"" centred on the Sulu and Celebes Seas between 1768 and 1898, and its complex interactions with China and the West. The author examines the social and cultural forces generated within the Sulu Sultanate by the China trade, namely the advent of organized, long distance maritime slave raiding and the assimilation of captives on a hitherto unprecedented scale into a traditional Malayo-Muslim social system. How entangled commodities, trajectories of tastes, and patterns of consumption and desire that span continents linked to slavery and slave raiding, the manipulation of diverse ethnic groups, the meaning and constitution of ""culture, "" and state formation? James Warren responds to this question by reconstructing the social, economic, and political relationships of diverse peoples in a multi-ethnic zone of which the Sulu Sultanate was the centre, and by problematizing important categories like ""piracy"", ""slavery"", ""culture"", ""ethnicity"", and the ""state"". His work analyzes the dynamics of the last autonomous Malayo-Muslim maritime state over a long historical period and describes its stunning response to the world capitalist economy and the rapid ""forward movement"" of colonialism and modernity. It also shows how the changing world of global cultural flows and economic interactions caused by cross-cultural trade and European dominance affected men and women who were forest dwellers, highlanders, and slaves, people who worked in everyday jobs as fishers, raiders, divers or traders. Often neglected by historians, the response of these members of society are a crucial part of the history of Southeast Asia."--
A Journey in the Back Country in the Winter of 1853-4
Title | A Journey in the Back Country in the Winter of 1853-4 PDF eBook |
Author | Frederick Law Olmsted |
Publisher | |
Pages | 300 |
Release | 1907 |
Genre | Cotton growing |
ISBN |
Mountain Masters
Title | Mountain Masters PDF eBook |
Author | John C. Inscoe |
Publisher | Univ. of Tennessee Press |
Pages | 382 |
Release | 1996 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780870499333 |
Antebellum Southern Appalachia has long been seen as a classless and essentially slaveless region - one so alienated and isolated from other parts of the South that, with the onset of the Civil War, highlanders opposed both secession and Confederate war efforts. In a multifaceted challenge to these basic assumptions about Appalachian society in the mid-nineteenth century, John Inscoe reveals new variations on the diverse motives and rationales that drove Southerners, particularly in the Upper South, out of the Union. Mountain Masters vividly portrays the wealth, family connections, commercial activities, and governmental power of the slaveholding elite that controlled the social, economic, and political development of western North Carolina. In examining the role played by slavery in shaping the political consciousness of mountain residents, the book also provides fresh insights into the nature of southern class interaction, community structure, and master-slave relationships.
Race, War, and Remembrance in the Appalachian South
Title | Race, War, and Remembrance in the Appalachian South PDF eBook |
Author | John Inscoe |
Publisher | University Press of Kentucky |
Pages | 414 |
Release | 2008-01-01 |
Genre | Performing Arts |
ISBN | 0813124999 |
John C. Inscoe is a luminary in the field of Appalachian studies. He has spent much of his career exploring the social, economic, and political significance of slavery and race in the mountain South as well as the complex nature of the region’s Civil War loyalties and the brutal guerrilla warfare that stemmed from those divisions. Using intimate vignettes to focus on individuals, families, and communities, he keeps the human dimension at the forefront of his analysis. In this collection of essays, produced over the past two decades, Inscoe devotes equal attention to how historical truths have been reshaped by later generations with vastly differing agendas. Blending fact and fiction, reality and perception, Race, War, and Remembrance in the Appalachian South represents a multifaceted embodiment of a unique time and place in American history.