Worthy of Freedom(English, Paperback, Connolly Jonathan)

Worthy of Freedom(English, Paperback, Connolly Jonathan)

  • Connolly Jonathan
Publisher:University of Chicago PressISBN 13: 9780226833644ISBN 10: 022683364X

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Worthy of Freedom(English, Paperback, Connolly Jonathan) is written by Connolly Jonathan and published by The University of Chicago Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 022683364X (ISBN 10) and 9780226833644 (ISBN 13).

A study of Indian indentured labor in Mauritius, British Guiana, and Trinidad that explores the history of indenture's normalization. In this book, historian Jonathan Connolly traces the normalization of indenture from its controversial beginnings to its widespread adoption across the British Empire during the nineteenth century. Initially viewed as a covert revival of slavery, indenture caused a scandal in Britain and India. But over time, economic conflict in the colonies altered public perceptions of indenture, now increasingly viewed as a legitimate form of free labor and a means of preserving the promise of abolition. Connolly explains how the large-scale, state-sponsored migration of Indian subjects to work on sugar plantations across Mauritius, British Guiana, and Trinidad transformed both the notion of post-slavery free labor and the political economy of emancipation. Excavating legal and public debates and tracing practical applications of the law, Connolly carefully reconstructs how the categories of free and unfree labor were made and remade to suit the interests of capital and empire, showing that emancipation was not simply a triumphal event but, rather, a deeply contested process. In so doing, he advances an original interpretation of how indenture changed the meaning of "freedom" in a post-abolition world.