Publication
Liverpool : Liverpool University Press, 2016.
ISBN
9781781383551
Collections
Notes
CONTENTS
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Introduction
— Katie Donington, Ryan Hanley and Jessica Moody
PART I: Little Britain’s History of Slavery
1. From Guinea to Guernsey and Cornwall to the Caribbean: Recovering the History of Slavery in the Western English Channel
— Brycchan Carey
2. ‘there to Sing the Song of Moses’: John Jea’s Methodism and Working-class Attitudes to Slavery in Liverpool and Portsmouth, 1801–1817
— Ryan Hanley
3. Portrait of a Slave-trading Family: the Staniforths of Liverpool
— Jane Longmore
4. Forgotten Women: Anna Eliza Elletson and Absentee Slave Ownership
— Hannah Young
5. East Meets West: Exploring the Connections Between Britain, the Caribbean and the East India Company, C. 1757–1857
— Chris Jeppesen
PART II: Little Britain’s Memory of Slavery
6. Whose Memories? Edward Long and the Work of Re-remembering
— Catherine Hall
7. Liverpool’s Local Tints: Drowning Memory and ‘maritimising’ Slavery in a Seaport City
— Jessica Moody
8. Local Roots/global Routes: Slavery, Memory and Identity in Hackney
— Katie Donington
9. Multidirectional Memory, Many-headed Hydras and Glasgow
— Michael Morris
10. Making Museum Narratives of Slavery and Anti-slavery in Olney
— Leanne Munroe
Afterword
— John Oldfield
Selected Bibliography
Index
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Introduction
— Katie Donington, Ryan Hanley and Jessica Moody
PART I: Little Britain’s History of Slavery
1. From Guinea to Guernsey and Cornwall to the Caribbean: Recovering the History of Slavery in the Western English Channel
— Brycchan Carey
2. ‘there to Sing the Song of Moses’: John Jea’s Methodism and Working-class Attitudes to Slavery in Liverpool and Portsmouth, 1801–1817
— Ryan Hanley
3. Portrait of a Slave-trading Family: the Staniforths of Liverpool
— Jane Longmore
4. Forgotten Women: Anna Eliza Elletson and Absentee Slave Ownership
— Hannah Young
5. East Meets West: Exploring the Connections Between Britain, the Caribbean and the East India Company, C. 1757–1857
— Chris Jeppesen
PART II: Little Britain’s Memory of Slavery
6. Whose Memories? Edward Long and the Work of Re-remembering
— Catherine Hall
7. Liverpool’s Local Tints: Drowning Memory and ‘maritimising’ Slavery in a Seaport City
— Jessica Moody
8. Local Roots/global Routes: Slavery, Memory and Identity in Hackney
— Katie Donington
9. Multidirectional Memory, Many-headed Hydras and Glasgow
— Michael Morris
10. Making Museum Narratives of Slavery and Anti-slavery in Olney
— Leanne Munroe
Afterword
— John Oldfield
Selected Bibliography
Index