“A lucid, fluent and fascinating account of the Zong. The book
details the horror of the mass killing of enslaved Africans on board
the ship in 1781.”—Gad Heuman, co-editor of The Routledge History
of Slavery On November 29, 1781, Captain Collingwood of the British
ship Zong commanded his crew to throw overboard one-third of his
cargo: a shipment of Africans bound for slavery in America. The
captain believed his ship was off course, and he feared there was not
enough drinking water to last until landfall. This book is the first
to examine in detail the deplorable killings on the Zong, the lawsuit
that ensued, how the murder of 132 slaves affected debates about
slavery, and the way we remember the infamous Zong today. Historian
James Walvin explores all aspects of the Zong’s voyage and the
subsequent trial—a case brought to court not for the murder of the
slaves but as a suit against the insurers who denied the owners’
claim that their “cargo” had been necessarily jettisoned. The
scandalous case prompted wide debate and fueled Britain’s awakening
abolition movement. Without the episode of the Zong, Walvin contends,
the process of ending the slave trade would have taken an entirely
different moral and political trajectory. He concludes with a
fascinating discussion of how the case of the Zong, though unique in
the history of slave ships, has come to be understood as typical of
life on all such ships. “Engaging . . . [Walvin’s] expertise
shines through with surgical use of statistics and absorbing
deviations into subjects such as Turner’s masterpiece The Slave Ship
and the slave-fueled growth of Liverpool.”—Daily Mail
Les mer
A Massacre, the Law & the End of Slavery
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780300180756
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter