Description

Book Synopsis
This story of Dutch involvement in Atlantic slavery

Trade Review
'A fundamental addition to a distinguished genealogy of work - from Ottobah Cugoano to Eric Williams and Jean Casimir - a genealogy in which scholarship and experientia Africana meet' -- Walter Mignolo, William H Wannamaker Distinguished Professor in Literature and Romance Studies at Duke University
'This erudite history of Dutch slavery, revolts, abolition efforts, and emancipation is told from the underside of Dutch life. ... [It is] a breathtaking portrait of an uncomfortable history, an agonising story to be told and never forgotten' -- Lewis R. Gordon, Laura H. Carnell Professor of Philosophy and Jewish Studies and Founding Director of the Institute for the Study of Race and Social Thought and the Center for Afro-Jewish Studies at Temple University

Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Stephen Small, UC Berkeley
Preface
Artwell Cain, NiNsee
1. Introduction, Goals and Issues
Introduction and Goals
Context and Concepts
Importance and Relevance
Overview of Chapters
2. Transatlantic Slavery and the Rise of the European
World Order
The Age of Banditry (1492–1648)
Sovereignty and Chattel Slavery (1648–1789)
Citizenship, Slavery and the ‘Free Soil Ideology’
Science and Chattel Slavery
3. Chattel Slavery, Sugar and Salt
Slavery and the Making of Global Economy
Slavery and Sugar
Sugar and Suriname
Pacification and Resistance
4. Abolition without Emancipation
European and Systemic Context
From Regulation to Intervention
Modalities of Abolition: Progressive Control versus
Transformative Change
Abolition and Citizenship
5. Trajectories of Emancipation: Religion, Class,
Gender and Race
Religion and Emancipation
Class and Emancipation
viii The Dutch Atlantic
Gender and Emancipation
Race and Emancipation
The Immediate Aftermath of Abolition
6. The Legacy of Slavery: The Unfinished Business of
Emancipation
Memory and Dignitarianism
Commemorators and Commemoration
Integration and Multiculturalism
NiNsee as a Contested Project
Museums and Galleries
Reparations
Anniversaries and Apologies
7. Conclusion: Parallel Histories and Intertwined
Belonging
Some Conclusions
A Final Note
Bibliography
Index

The Dutch Atlantic

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    A Paperback / softback by Kwame Nimako, Glenn Willemsen, Stephen Small

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      View other formats and editions of The Dutch Atlantic by Kwame Nimako

      Publisher: Pluto Press
      Publication Date: 12/09/2011
      ISBN13: 9780745331072, 978-0745331072
      ISBN10: 0745331076

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This story of Dutch involvement in Atlantic slavery

      Trade Review
      'A fundamental addition to a distinguished genealogy of work - from Ottobah Cugoano to Eric Williams and Jean Casimir - a genealogy in which scholarship and experientia Africana meet' -- Walter Mignolo, William H Wannamaker Distinguished Professor in Literature and Romance Studies at Duke University
      'This erudite history of Dutch slavery, revolts, abolition efforts, and emancipation is told from the underside of Dutch life. ... [It is] a breathtaking portrait of an uncomfortable history, an agonising story to be told and never forgotten' -- Lewis R. Gordon, Laura H. Carnell Professor of Philosophy and Jewish Studies and Founding Director of the Institute for the Study of Race and Social Thought and the Center for Afro-Jewish Studies at Temple University

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements
      Foreword
      Stephen Small, UC Berkeley
      Preface
      Artwell Cain, NiNsee
      1. Introduction, Goals and Issues
      Introduction and Goals
      Context and Concepts
      Importance and Relevance
      Overview of Chapters
      2. Transatlantic Slavery and the Rise of the European
      World Order
      The Age of Banditry (1492–1648)
      Sovereignty and Chattel Slavery (1648–1789)
      Citizenship, Slavery and the ‘Free Soil Ideology’
      Science and Chattel Slavery
      3. Chattel Slavery, Sugar and Salt
      Slavery and the Making of Global Economy
      Slavery and Sugar
      Sugar and Suriname
      Pacification and Resistance
      4. Abolition without Emancipation
      European and Systemic Context
      From Regulation to Intervention
      Modalities of Abolition: Progressive Control versus
      Transformative Change
      Abolition and Citizenship
      5. Trajectories of Emancipation: Religion, Class,
      Gender and Race
      Religion and Emancipation
      Class and Emancipation
      viii The Dutch Atlantic
      Gender and Emancipation
      Race and Emancipation
      The Immediate Aftermath of Abolition
      6. The Legacy of Slavery: The Unfinished Business of
      Emancipation
      Memory and Dignitarianism
      Commemorators and Commemoration
      Integration and Multiculturalism
      NiNsee as a Contested Project
      Museums and Galleries
      Reparations
      Anniversaries and Apologies
      7. Conclusion: Parallel Histories and Intertwined
      Belonging
      Some Conclusions
      A Final Note
      Bibliography
      Index

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