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The problem of emancipation: the Caribbean roots of the American Civil War
Edward Bartlett Rugemer
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Frontmatter
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Acknowledgments (page xiii)
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INTRODUCTION (page 1)
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PART I. THE LESSONS OF ABOLITIONISM
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1. The Nineteenth-Century Anglo-Atlantic World (page 17)
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2. Abolitionists and Insurrections (page 42)
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3. Conflicting Impressions (page 66)
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4. The Rebellions of 1831 (page 96)
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PART II. THE LESSONS OF ABOLITION
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5. The Conversion of William Ellery Channing (page 145)
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6. The Fears of Robert Monroe Harrison (page 180)
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7. Rethinking Liberty (page 222)
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8. British Abolition and the Coming of the Civil War (page 258)
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EPILOGUE: The Morant Bay Rebellion and Radical Reconstruction (page 291)
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Bibliography (page 303)
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Index (page 329)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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JER | 29.3 (Fall 2009): 565-570 | http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_the_early_republic/v029/29.3.mitton.html |
Citable Link
Published: c2008
Publisher: Louisiana State University Press
- 9780807133385 (hardcover)