‘Malleable at the European Will’: British Discourse on Slavery (1784–1824) and the Image of Africans ‘Malleable at the European Will’: British Discourse on Slavery (1784–1824) and the Image of Africans

‘Malleable at the European Will’: British Discourse on Slavery (1784–1824) and the Image of Africans

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Publisher Description

Helmut Meier‘s study of pro- and anti-slavery texts from 1784–1825 focuses on understanding the distinct image of Africans in the British debate on the slave trade and slavery as such. Starting from the premise that, at the threshold from the early to the late modern period, the distinct image of Africans as slaves was instrumental in universalizing a Eurocentric concept of capitalist wage labor both at the colonial centres and margins, Meier argues that, by portraying African slaves as suffering wretches, especially anti-slavery texts created colonial Others in an indistinct zone between inclusion and exclusion from humanity. The discourse on slavery thus constructs African slaves as mimetic Others which could subsequently become the objects of a discourse of colonial reform and ‘betterment’.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2019
May 30
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
360
Pages
PUBLISHER
Ibidem
SELLER
Libreka GmbH
SIZE
3
MB