Title of article :
FREE TRADE, FREE LABOUR, AND SLAVE SUGAR IN VICTORIAN BRITAIN
Author/Authors :
HUZZEY، RICHARD نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
This article reconsiders the sugar duties controversy in early Victorian Britain. Rather than
representing the defeat of abolitionism by free trade zeal, the sugar question was a contest of two varieties of
anti-slavery thought which had previously co-existed : one believing that slavery’s immorality was accompanied
by its productive inferiority to free labour and the other asserting that slavery’s profits in this world
were punished outside the marketplace. West Indian decline after the end of protection led to a revision of free
labour superiority, with providential externalities replacing marketplace competitiveness. The episode demonstrates
how little most Britons understood the welfare of black freedmen to be connected to anti-slavery after
emancipation. A fuller appreciation of the slave sugar debate furthermore recovers an important abolitionist
strand in the new ‘human history ’ of free trade.
Journal title :
The Historical Journal
Journal title :
The Historical Journal