Publication:

Recovering Scotland's slavery past: The Caribbean connection

    Full details

    Authors & editors

    Devine, Tom M

    Publisher Edinburgh University Press
    Year of publication 2015
    Languages

    Medium Book
    Edition1
    Topics

    Food (non-cereal) processes > Sugar
    People and communities > Slavery

    Tags

    Scope & contentPublisher's comments:
    The first book to strip away the myths and write the real history of Scotland’s slavery past For more than a century and a half the real story of Scotland’s connections to transatlantic slavery has been lost to history and shrouded in myth. There was even denial that the Scots unlike the English had any significant involvement in slavery. Scotland saw itself as a pioneering abolitionist nation untainted by a slavery past.

    This book is the first detailed attempt to challenge these beliefs. Written by the foremost scholars in the field, with findings based on sustained archival research, the volume systematically peels away the mythology and radically revises the traditional picture. In doing so the contributors come to a number of surprising conclusions.

    Topics covered include national amnesia and slavery, the impact of profits from slavery on Scotland, Scots in the Caribbean sugar islands, compensation paid to Scottish owners when slavery was abolished, domestic controversies on the slave trade, the role of Scots in slave trading from English ports and much else.

    The book is a major contribution to Scottish history, to studies of the Scots global diaspora and to the history of slavery within the British Empire. It will have wide appeal not only to scholars and students but to all readers interested in discovering an untold aspect of Scotland’s past.

    Copies held

    Accession no. 230687

    • Shelf location: D400-DEV

    Divisions within this publication

    • 1: Introduction: Scotland and Transatlantic Slavery, T. M. Devine
    • 2: Lost to History, T. M. Devine
    • 3: Yonder Awa: slavery and distancing strategies in Scottish literature, Michael Morris
    • 4: Early Scottish sugar planters in the Leeward Islands c.1660-1740, Stuart M. Nisbet
    • 5: The Scots penetration of the Jamaican plantation business, Eric J. Graham
    • 6: ‘The habits of these creatures in clinging one to the other’: Enslaved Africans, Scots and the plantations of Guyana, David Alston
    • 7: The great Glasgow West India house of John Campbell, Senior and Co., Stephen Mullen
    • 8: Scottish Surgeons in the Liverpool Slave Trade in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries, Suzanne Schwarz
    • 9: Scotland and Colonial Slave-Ownership: the evidence of the Slave Compensation Records, Nicholas Draper
    • 10: The Upas Tree, beneath whose pestiferous shade all intellect languishes and all virtue dies': Scottish public perceptions of the Slave Trade and Slavery, 1756-1833, Iain Whyte
    • 11: The most unbending Conservative in Britain': Archibald Alison and Pro-slavery discourse, Catherine Hall
    • 12: Did Slavery make Scotia great? A question revisited, T. M. Devine
    • 13: Conclusion: History, Scotland and Slavery, T. M. Devine

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