Rites of August First: Emancipation Day in the Black Atlantic World

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LSU Press, 2007 - 312 páginas

Thirty years before Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, the antislavery movement won its first victory in the British Parliament. On August 1, 1834, the Abolition of Slavery Bill took effect, ending colonial slavery throughout the British Empire. Over the next three decades, "August First Day," also known as "West India Day" and "Emancipation Day," became the most important annual celebration of emancipation among people of African descent in the northern United States, the British Caribbean, Canada West, and the United Kingdom and played a critical role in popular mobilization against American slavery. In Rites of August First, J. R. Kerr-Ritchie provides the first detailed analysis of the origins, nature, and consequences of this important commemoration that helped to shape the age of Anglo-American emancipation.
Combining social, cultural, and political history, Kerr-Ritchie discusses the ideological and cultural representations of August First Day in print, oratory, and visual images. Spanning the Western hemisphere, Kerr-Ritchie's study successfully unravels the cultural politics of emancipation celebrations, analyzing the social practices informed by public ritual, symbol, and spectacle designed to elicit feelings of common identity among blacks in the Atlantic World. Rites of August First shows how and why the commemorative events changed between British emancipation and the freeing of slaves in the United States a generation later, while also examining the connections among local, regional, and international commemorations.
While shedding light on an important black institution that has been long ignored, Rites of August First also contributes to the broader study of emancipation and black Atlantic identity. Its transnational approach challenges local and national narratives that have largely shaped previous investigations of these questions. Kerr-Ritchie shows how culture and community were truly political at this important historical moment and, most broadly, how politics and culture converge and profoundly influence each other.

 

Índice

Transnational Emancipation Day
1
CHAPTER 1 August First in the British West Indies
13
CHAPTER 2 West Indian Emancipation and the American Antislavery Picnic
49
CHAPTER 3 August First in AfroAmerica
82
CHAPTER 4 Black Loyalists in Canada West
118
CHAPTER 5 Fugitive Slaves in Canada West
144
Black Militias in the Atlantic World
164
CHAPTER 7 Emancipation in PanAfrican Perspective
193
EPILOGUE
239
BIBLIOGRAPHY
245
INDEX
265
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Sobre el autor (2007)

J. R. Kerr-Ritchie is an associate professor of history at Howard University in Washington, D.C., and the author of Freedpeople in the Tobacco South: Virginia, 1860--1900.

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