Introduction PART I: AWAY Slaves and Scholars Servants and Slaves: the Seventeenth Century Creoles and Slaves: the Eighteenth Century Sojourners, Slaves and Stipendiarys: the Nineteenth Century The Trade PART II: AT HOME Protestant, Catholic And Dissenter Dublin, Sweet City Dynasties Anti-Slavery Literature, Mostly Imaginative PART III: EMANCIPATION Daniel O'Connell and Anti-Slavery Frederick Douglass and the 'Antieverythingarians' Famine and War A Special Relationship? Conclusion
NINI RODGERS was born in Northern Ireland in 1940. She attended Queen's University, Belfast, UK and throughout her academic career, as a member of staff in the History department, she taught courses on European overseas expansion and slavery. She has published articles on nineteenth-century British policy in Ethiopia, the impact of black slavery on eighteenth-century Ireland and the development of the Irish anti-slavery movement. She is currently an honorary senior research fellow in the School of History and Anthropology, Queen's University, Belfast.
'Her [Rodgers] perseverance has produced an immensely readable volume, peppered with colourful anecdotes, that vividly describes not merely Ireland's relations with slavery, but the complexity of Irish society itself. It is a wonderful contribution to the commemoration of the bicentenary of the Abolition Act (1807), which will form an invaluable platform for future studies of Ireland and the black Atlantic.' - Daire Keogh, Irish Times '...her [Rodgers] book reveals a depth of learning and a level of engagement with her subject that sets a new standard.' - Bruce Nelson, Field Day Review 'The great strength of the work is its integration of many overlapping themes in economic and cultural history.' Times Higher Education
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