Representing Slavery: Art, Artefacts and Archives in the Collections of the National Maritime Museum

Representing Slavery: Art, Artefacts and Archives in the Collections of the National Maritime Museum

by David Richardson (Contributor), JamesWalvin (Contributor), HakimAdi (Contributor), JaneWebster (Contributor), Douglas Hamilton (Contributor), JohnOldfield (Contributor), RobertJ.Blyth (Contributor), PaulLovejoy (Contributor), Geoff Quilley (Contributor), Marcus Wood (Contributor)

Synopsis

Representing Slavery draws on the extensive collections of the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, to offer unique insights into the histories and legacies of slavery, the slave trade and abolition from the mid-16th until the early 20th centuries. Newly available in paperback, the book illustrates and documents a wide range of objects relating to the slave trade, including maps, photographs, pamphlets and official publications, ethnographic documents, newspapers, paintings, prints and drawings.Ten specially commissioned essays by leading scholars provide a fascinating historical framework, demonstrating the scale and brutality of slavery, the form and extent of African resistance, and the widespread nature of efforts to achieve abolition and emancipation. Representing Slavery reveals, in stark detail, the lasting and multifaceted impact of slavery on Africa as a whole, Europe, and the Americas, as well as highlighting the importance of the often overlooked slave trades in East Africa and the Indian Ocean.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Lund Humphries
Published: 14 Aug 2007

ISBN 10: 0853319669
ISBN 13: 9780853319665

Media Reviews
'The beautifully illustrated volume draws readers deeply into the experience of slavery and the long process of abolition, offering vivid perspectives on the slave trade in both the Atlantic and Indian Ocean worlds....Readers will be fascinated by the degree to which the legacies of the trade and its abolition extend to the present...Essential.' Choice
Author Bio
Dr Douglas Hamilton is a Reader in History at the University of Winchester. He was previously Senior Lecturer in Atlantic History at the University of Hull and Curator of 18th-century Maritime and Imperial History at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich (2004 to 2006). Dr Robert Blyth is Curator, Imperial & Maritime History at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich. An Indian Ocean specialist, his publications include The Empire of the Raj: India, Eastern Africa and the Middle East, 1858-1947 (2003).