Description

Book Synopsis
In Moral Commerce, Julie L. Holcomb traces the genealogy of the boycott of slave labor from its seventeenth-century Quaker origins through its late nineteenth-century...

Trade Review

Moral Commerce will appeal to a broad range of readers, from students in upper division undergraduate college courses to graduate students to informed readers in general. This account should certainly be read by every scholar of both American and British antislavery, black nationalism, African recolonization, and social reform movements.

* H-Pennsylvania *

In this important, scholarly and highly detailed new book, Julie L. Holcomb carefully examines how the Free Produce Movement took shape: its history, scope and remit, successes, failures, key players and complex organisation.... The combination of broader brushstrokes and fine detail, drawn from a wealth of primary sources, will provide fascinating reading for both specialist and non-specialist readerships.

* Quaker Studies *

The most carefully contextualized, thorough history of the "free-produce" movement, which boycotted goods made by slave labor and pushed to market free-labor-made products, persuasively argues for the historical importance of the free-produce minority within the minority of abolitionists.

* Journal of American History *

In this important, scholarly, and highly detailed new book, Julie L. Holcomb examines the successes and failures of the free produce movement.... Contributes considerably to our understanding of the ideologies, mechanisms, and impacts of free produce.... Richest in its meticulous exploration of free produce within American culture.

* Winterthur Portfolio *

A fascinating account that brings new sources and perspectives to bear on Quaker abolitionist activism.... Persuasively situates the history of abolitionist boycotts within the dynamic context of Quaker criticisms of transatlantic consumer culture and moral repugnance in the face of slavery's brutality.

* American Historical Review *

Holcomb demonstrates how the movement forced otherwise neutral parties to take a side in the debate, ensuring the discussion around free-labor goods remained relevant to the antislavery plight. Her study is a significant addition to the historiography of the free-labor movement, and her excellent work is a must-read for anyone interested in the study of the antislavery movement and Quakerism.

* Reading Religion *

Moral Commerce: Quakers and the Transatlantic Boycott of the Slave Labor Economy meticulously chronicles the transformation of mid-seventeenth-century Biblically-based Quaker opposition to consuming commodities produced from slave labor to an international movement equally grounded in spiritual and secular concerns.

* The North Carolina Historical Review *

Moral Commerce touches on labor, political, social, and cultural history in eight wide-ranging chapters of less than 300 pages. Holcomb provides readers with an engaging and concise narrative that, among other things, examines a key question that the book sets out to answer; that is, to what extent was the boycott a Quaker movement?

* The Journal of African American History *

Table of Contents

Introduction: A Principle Both Moral and Commercial
1. Prize Goods: The Quaker Origins of the Slave-Labor Boycott
2. Blood-Stained Sugar: The Eighteenth-Century British Abstention Campaign
3. Striking at the Root of Corruption: American Quakers and the Boycott in the Early National Period
4. I Am a Man, Your Brother: Elizabeth Heyrick, Abstention, and Immediatism
5. Woman's Heart: Free Produce and Domesticity
6. An Abstinence Baptism: American Abolitionism and Free Produce
7. Yards of Cotton Cloth and Pounds of Sugar: The Transatlantic Free-Produce Movement
8. Bailing the Atlantic with a Spoon: Free Produce in the 1840s and 1850s
Conclusion: There Is Death in the Pot!

Moral Commerce Quakers and the Transatlantic

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£35.15

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RRP £37.00 – you save £1.85 (5%)

Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by Julie L. Holcomb

1 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Moral Commerce Quakers and the Transatlantic by Julie L. Holcomb

    Publisher: Cornell University Press
    Publication Date: 23/08/2016
    ISBN13: 9780801452086, 978-0801452086
    ISBN10: 0801452082

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    In Moral Commerce, Julie L. Holcomb traces the genealogy of the boycott of slave labor from its seventeenth-century Quaker origins through its late nineteenth-century...

    Trade Review

    Moral Commerce will appeal to a broad range of readers, from students in upper division undergraduate college courses to graduate students to informed readers in general. This account should certainly be read by every scholar of both American and British antislavery, black nationalism, African recolonization, and social reform movements.

    * H-Pennsylvania *

    In this important, scholarly and highly detailed new book, Julie L. Holcomb carefully examines how the Free Produce Movement took shape: its history, scope and remit, successes, failures, key players and complex organisation.... The combination of broader brushstrokes and fine detail, drawn from a wealth of primary sources, will provide fascinating reading for both specialist and non-specialist readerships.

    * Quaker Studies *

    The most carefully contextualized, thorough history of the "free-produce" movement, which boycotted goods made by slave labor and pushed to market free-labor-made products, persuasively argues for the historical importance of the free-produce minority within the minority of abolitionists.

    * Journal of American History *

    In this important, scholarly, and highly detailed new book, Julie L. Holcomb examines the successes and failures of the free produce movement.... Contributes considerably to our understanding of the ideologies, mechanisms, and impacts of free produce.... Richest in its meticulous exploration of free produce within American culture.

    * Winterthur Portfolio *

    A fascinating account that brings new sources and perspectives to bear on Quaker abolitionist activism.... Persuasively situates the history of abolitionist boycotts within the dynamic context of Quaker criticisms of transatlantic consumer culture and moral repugnance in the face of slavery's brutality.

    * American Historical Review *

    Holcomb demonstrates how the movement forced otherwise neutral parties to take a side in the debate, ensuring the discussion around free-labor goods remained relevant to the antislavery plight. Her study is a significant addition to the historiography of the free-labor movement, and her excellent work is a must-read for anyone interested in the study of the antislavery movement and Quakerism.

    * Reading Religion *

    Moral Commerce: Quakers and the Transatlantic Boycott of the Slave Labor Economy meticulously chronicles the transformation of mid-seventeenth-century Biblically-based Quaker opposition to consuming commodities produced from slave labor to an international movement equally grounded in spiritual and secular concerns.

    * The North Carolina Historical Review *

    Moral Commerce touches on labor, political, social, and cultural history in eight wide-ranging chapters of less than 300 pages. Holcomb provides readers with an engaging and concise narrative that, among other things, examines a key question that the book sets out to answer; that is, to what extent was the boycott a Quaker movement?

    * The Journal of African American History *

    Table of Contents

    Introduction: A Principle Both Moral and Commercial
    1. Prize Goods: The Quaker Origins of the Slave-Labor Boycott
    2. Blood-Stained Sugar: The Eighteenth-Century British Abstention Campaign
    3. Striking at the Root of Corruption: American Quakers and the Boycott in the Early National Period
    4. I Am a Man, Your Brother: Elizabeth Heyrick, Abstention, and Immediatism
    5. Woman's Heart: Free Produce and Domesticity
    6. An Abstinence Baptism: American Abolitionism and Free Produce
    7. Yards of Cotton Cloth and Pounds of Sugar: The Transatlantic Free-Produce Movement
    8. Bailing the Atlantic with a Spoon: Free Produce in the 1840s and 1850s
    Conclusion: There Is Death in the Pot!

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