Dr Padraic X. Scanlan earned a BA (Hons) in History from McGill University in 2008, and a PhD in History from Princeton University in 2013. He is Assistant Professor in the Centre for Industrial Relations and Human Resources and the Centre for Diaspora & Transnational Studies at the University of Toronto and a Research Associate at the Joint Centre for History and Economics at the University of Cambridge. He has also held appointments at the London School of Economics and Harvard University.
Engrossing and powerful . . . rich and thought-provoking. -- Fara
Dabhoiwala * Guardian *
Slave Empire is lucid, elegant and forensic. It deals with
appalling horrors in cool and convincing prose. * The Economist
*
Path-breaking . . . a major rewriting of history. -- Mihir Bose *
Irish Times *
Scanlan writes about how the antislavery movement became its own
political and economic force: a moralising stance for an empire
which continued to profit from the global network of unfree labour.
Britain's mills, for example, still processed cotton from the
American South long after the slave trade in its colonies was
abolished. -- Katrina Gulliver, Spectator
Padraic X. Scanlan has written a sweeping and devastating history
of how slavery made modern Britain, and destroyed so much else.
Ranging from Europe to the Caribbean, from West Africa to the new
United States, Scanlan narrates the rise and fall of Britain's
slave empire with an epic concision and an unwavering humanity. He
also reveals, with unprecedented clarity and power, how the
antislavery movement in Britain largely failed to accept Black
equality. When the British parliament finally voted to end slavery
in 1833, it paid a fortune in compensation to slaveholders and not
a penny to enslaved people. Britain continued to rely on
slave-produced cotton (especially from the United States) for
decades, while in its own empire it replaced slavery with new forms
of coerced labour and racial hierarchy. Most Britons have learned
to deny or forget that their wealth was rooted in slavery, while
occasionally congratulating themselves on their moral achievement
of no longer enslaving people. Slave Empire offers a
shattering rebuke to the amnesia and myopia which still structure
British history. -- Nicholas Guyatt, author of Bind Us Apart:
How Enlightened Americans Invented Racial Segregation
Padraic Scanlan is the leading historian of British antislavery in
Africa. In Slave Empire, he tells the larger story of the British
empire over two centuries, and sets slavery at the heart of
political and economic history. The liberal empire of the
nineteenth century, he shows, was the outcome of the long encounter
of antislavery and economic expansion founded on enslaved or unfree
labour. Antislavery was itself the excuse for empire. -- Emma
Rothschild, Jeremy and Jane Knowles Professor of History, Harvard
University
Scanlan's book is a fresh and fascinating new telling of the story
of Britain's role in slavery and abolition in the Atlantic World.
Slave Empire shows how an empire built on slavery became an empire
sustained and expanded by antislavery. A stunning narrative, Slave
Empire deftly combines rich storytelling with vivid details and
deep scholarship. -- Bronwen Everill, author of Not Made By Slaves:
Ethical Capitalism in the Age of Abolition
This accessible synthesis of recent scholarship comes at the right
time to help shape current debates about Britain and slavery. --
Nicholas Draper, author of The Price of Emancipation:
Slave-Ownership, Compensation and British Society at the End of
Slavery
Scanlan writes about how the antislavery movement became its own
political and economic force: a moralising stance for an empire
which continued to profit from the global network of unfree labour.
Britain's mills, for example, still processed cotton from the
American South long after the slave trade in its colonies was
abolished. -- Katrina Gulliver * Spectator *
Powerful, often devastating, always compelling. * All About History
*
Freedom's Debtors interweaves a remarkably broad array of
historical themes common to studies of abolition and
post-emancipation societies, including contemporary notions of race
and civilization, the tension between morality and profitability,
and conflicts over land and labour. Scanlan does this remarkably
well, in smooth, clear prose and with a keen eye for rich anecdotes
and illustrations. These features, along with Scanlan's mastery of
the sources and literature, make this book essential reading, not
just for Africanists but for anyone interested in antislavery and
abolition. -- Sean M. Kelley, Slavery & Abolition
Freedom's Debtors offers a much-needed account of how British
abolitionist principles were developed and applied in West Africa .
. . Scanlan's study emphasises how British and other non-African
actors developed and profited from new forms of coercive labor as a
result of the abolition of the slave trade . . . Scanlan's book
provides a strong foundation for exploring the connections between
the 'abolitionist' laws and policies imposed on Sierra Leone's
'Liberated Africans' and those that were applied to other imperial
subjects during this dynamic time of ideological revolution and
global expansion. -- Trina Leah Hogg, Journal of African
History
Padraic Scanlan has not only written an excellent book on Sierra
Leone, he has produced one of the most important books ever written
on Liberated Africans . . . Freedom's Debtors is essential reading
. . . Scanlan powerfully re-centres our understanding of
abolitionism and forces us to re-examine its immediate and
long-term effects in Africa. -- Matthew S. Hopper, Journal of
British Studies
Based on exhaustive research within British missionary and personal
papers as well as documents in the Sierra Leone archives,
[Freedom's Debtors] . . . breaks conceptual ground and charts a new
historiographical direction. Scanlan makes connections between the
logic of capitalism and its intersection with colonialism and
slavery. He demonstrates how British West Africa was enmeshed with
economic systems at a global level and by taking the focus away
from Europe, he challenges the prevailing narratives of
abolitionism and colonialism. His argues convincingly that without
slavery, without colonial 'outposts', capitalism and freedom might
have evolved differently. This compelling book makes a huge
contribution to our understanding of the processes which led to
abolition but has wider implications for the historiography and the
paradigms that inform it. * Canadian Historical Association *
Freedom's Debtors is timely, original, and lucid. Its analysis of
the political, economic, and cultural forces that shaped the
development of Sierra Leone challenges celebratory narratives about
the abolition of the slave trade and offers a new account of life
in this British colony. Padraic Scanlan's attention to the agency
of West Africans and to 'British antislavery in practice' makes
this work an important contribution to our understanding of the
nature and locus of Atlantic history. * American Historical
Association *
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