2017
DOI: 10.1017/s0147547916000375
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Asian Indentured Labor in the Age of African American Emancipation

Abstract: This article examines transnational connections between African American emancipation in the United States and Chinese and Indian indenture within the British Empire. In an era of social upheaval and capitalist crisis, planters and colonial officials envisioned coolies as a source of uninterrupted plantation labor. This vision was often bound to the conditions of African American emancipation. In British Honduras, colonial officials sought to bring emancipated African Americans to the colony as labor for sugar… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…At another level they reveal the "impossible demand for postslavery societies, for everything to be the same yet characterized by free instead of enslaved labor." 7 A second theme concerns the coolie question as a global discourse, in which Euro-American planters and employers from the U.S. South, the Caribbean, Australia, and Africa actively exchanged both philosophical and practical views. Finally, two articles consider the coolie question from the vantage of labor rights in the present.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At another level they reveal the "impossible demand for postslavery societies, for everything to be the same yet characterized by free instead of enslaved labor." 7 A second theme concerns the coolie question as a global discourse, in which Euro-American planters and employers from the U.S. South, the Caribbean, Australia, and Africa actively exchanged both philosophical and practical views. Finally, two articles consider the coolie question from the vantage of labor rights in the present.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%