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A Curse Upon The Nation Race Freedom And Extermination In America And The Atlantic World Kay Wright Lewis

  • SKU: BELL-7265186
A Curse Upon The Nation Race Freedom And Extermination In America And The Atlantic World Kay Wright Lewis
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A Curse Upon The Nation Race Freedom And Extermination In America And The Atlantic World Kay Wright Lewis instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Georgia Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.4 MB
Pages: 292
Author: Kay Wright Lewis
ISBN: 9780820351278, 082035127X
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

A Curse Upon The Nation Race Freedom And Extermination In America And The Atlantic World Kay Wright Lewis by Kay Wright Lewis 9780820351278, 082035127X instant download after payment.

How the specter of a race war has justified violence, molded collective memory, and permeated the rhetoric of slavery and freedom
From the inception of slavery as a pillar of the Atlantic World economy, both Europeans and Africans feared their mass extermination by the other in a race war. In the United States, says Kay Wright Lewis, this ingrained dread nourished a preoccupation with slave rebellions and would later help fuel the Civil War, thwart the aims of Reconstruction, justify Jim Crow, and even inform civil rights movement strategy. And yet, says Lewis, the historiography of slavery is all but silent on extermination as a category of analysis. Moreover, little of the existing sparse scholarship interrogates the black perspective on extermination. A Curse upon the Nation addresses both of these issues.
To explain how this belief in an impending race war shaped eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American politics, culture, and commerce, Lewis examines a wide range of texts including letters, newspapers, pamphlets, travel accounts, slave narratives, government documents, and abolitionist tracts. She foregrounds her readings in the long record of exterminatory warfare in Europe and its colonies, placing lopsided reprisals against African slave revolts—or even rumors of revolts—in a continuum with past brutal incursions against the Irish, Scots, Native Americans, and other groups out of favor with the empire. Lewis also shows how extermination became entwined with ideas about race and freedom from early in the process of enslavement, making survival an important form of resistance for African peoples in America.
For African Americans, enslaved and free, the potential for one-sided violence was always present and deeply traumatic. This groundbreaking study reevaluates how extermination shaped black understanding of the Atlantic slave trade and the political, social, and economic worlds in which it thrived.

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