Captives and voyagers black migrants across the eighteenth-century British Atlantic world /
I tiakina i:
Kaituhi matua: | |
---|---|
Kaituhi rangatōpū: | |
Hōputu: | Tāhiko īPukapuka |
Reo: | Ingarihi |
I whakaputaina: |
Baton Rouge :
Louisiana State University Press,
c2008.
|
Rangatū: | Antislavery, abolition, and the Atlantic world.
|
Ngā marau: | |
Urunga tuihono: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
Ngā Tūtohu: |
Tāpirihia he Tūtohu
Kāore He Tūtohu, Me noho koe te mea tuatahi ki te tūtohu i tēnei pūkete!
|
Rārangi ihirangi:
- The slave trade from the Biafran interior : violence, serial displacement, and the rudiments of Igbo society
- The slave ship and the beginnings of Igbo society in the African diaspora
- White power and the context of slave seasoning in eighteenth-century Jamaica
- Routines of disaster and revolution
- Social movement and imagining freedom in the British capital
- Migration and the impossible demands of leaving London
- From slaves to free subjects in British North America
- Black society and the limits of British freedom
- The effects of exodus : Afro-maritime society in motion
- Arriving in Sierra Leone : catastrophe and its aftermaths
- Conclusion: Migration and black society in the eighteenth-century British Atlantic world.