Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Surveying the continent Surveying the continent
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African anecdotes African anecdotes
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Comprehending Africa Comprehending Africa
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A white man’s grave? A white man’s grave?
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Conclusion: the view from the ship Conclusion: the view from the ship
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Notes Notes
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Seven Slave-trade suppression and the image of West Africa in nineteenth-century Britain
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Published:September 2015
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Abstract
With much anti-slave-trade activity taking place in the West African littoral, naval suppression was important in shaping and contributing to British knowledge of West African places and peoples. David Lambert considers (mis)understandings of slavery and the slave trade in West Africa; popular stereotypes and other forms of knowledge; abolitionism and the rise of the new racial sciences; comparisons with other parts of the British Atlantic world, especially the West Indian colonies; comparisons within West Africa, such as between Sierra Leone and Fernando Po; the development of the idea of West Africa as a ‘White Man’s Grave’. Particular attention is given to the variety of ways in which this knowledge was expressed and transmitted, including travel accounts, visual images, maps and statistics, and the political purposes to which it was put.
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