The Culture of English Antislavery, 1780-1860Routledge, 2004 M01 14 - 296 pages This book provides a fresh overall account of organised antislavery by focusing on the active minority of abolutionists throughout the country. The analysis of their culture of reform demonstrates the way in which alliances of diverse religious groups roused public opinion and influenced political leaders. The resulting definition of the distinctive `reform mentality' links antislavery to other efforts at moral and social improvement and highlights its contradictory relations to the social effects of industrialization and the growth of liberalism. |
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Page iv
... British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Turley, David The culture of English antislavery 1. Slavery, British abolitionist movements, history I. Title 322.440941 Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Turley, David ...
... British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Turley, David The culture of English antislavery 1. Slavery, British abolitionist movements, history I. Title 322.440941 Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Turley, David ...
Page 2
... British Caribbean after the American Revolution with the shift in Britain towards industrial capitalism, generating a powerful new class attached to laissez-faire and free-labour ideals. Recent, often brilliant, scholarship has thrown ...
... British Caribbean after the American Revolution with the shift in Britain towards industrial capitalism, generating a powerful new class attached to laissez-faire and free-labour ideals. Recent, often brilliant, scholarship has thrown ...
Page 11
... British commerce could further emancipationist objectives. After 1815 projects for the suppression of the transatlantic slave trade and the extension of freedom in Africa and the Americas were framed in antislavery minds by evident British ...
... British commerce could further emancipationist objectives. After 1815 projects for the suppression of the transatlantic slave trade and the extension of freedom in Africa and the Americas were framed in antislavery minds by evident British ...
Page 12
... British exports had largely consisted of a variety of woollen goods and traditional manufactures traded to both Europe and British colonies. This commerce paid for rising imports of sugar and tobacco from the West Indian and North ...
... British exports had largely consisted of a variety of woollen goods and traditional manufactures traded to both Europe and British colonies. This commerce paid for rising imports of sugar and tobacco from the West Indian and North ...
Page 13
... British exports expanded enormously between 1815 and 1850. In the same period there was also both liberalisation of trade and some shifts in the relative importance of the various directions trade followed. Some recent writers—notably ...
... British exports expanded enormously between 1815 and 1850. In the same period there was also both liberalisation of trade and some shifts in the relative importance of the various directions trade followed. Some recent writers—notably ...
Contents
1 | |
16 | |
3 MAKING ABOLITIONISTS | 45 |
4 BEING ABOLITIONISTS | 79 |
5 ABOLITIONISTS AND THE MIDDLECLASS REFORM COMPLEX | 104 |
6 ANTISLAVERY | 150 |
7 THE ANGLOAMERICAN CONNECTION | 190 |
8 CONCLUSIONS | 220 |
NOTES | 229 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 265 |
INDEX | 286 |
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Common terms and phrases
abolition abolitionism abolitionists activity African Institution agitation American abolitionists amongst Anglican Anglo-American anti anti-slave trade Anti-Slavery Society antislavery antislavery movement antislavery organisations antislavery reformers apprenticeship argument associates became BFASS Birmingham BL Add Britain British Buxton campaign century Chartist Christian Church claims collaboration colonial commitment committee convention Cropper culture Drescher earlier early economic efforts Elizur Wright emancipation England English evangelical free labour free trade Friends Garrison Garrisonian God’s Granville Sharp hostility influence interest James John Joseph Pease Joseph Priestley Joseph Sturge liberal liberty Liverpool London Manchester ment middle-class Minute Book mobilisation moral radicals outlook Papers parliament parliamentary patriotism Pease petitioning popular Priestley provincial public meeting Quaker Rational Dissenters religious role slave trade slaveholders slavery social Stephen Sturgeites sugar Texas Thomas Clarkson Thomas Fowell Buxton Thompson tion tionists Unitarian West Indian West Indies Wilberforce William working-class Zachary Macaulay