The Plantation Machine: Atlantic Capitalism in French Saint-Domingue and British Jamaica

The Plantation Machine: Atlantic Capitalism in French Saint-Domingue and British Jamaica

The Plantation Machine: Atlantic Capitalism in French Saint-Domingue and British Jamaica

The Plantation Machine: Atlantic Capitalism in French Saint-Domingue and British Jamaica

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Overview

Jamaica and Saint-Domingue were especially brutal but conspicuously successful eighteenth-century slave societies and imperial colonies. These plantation regimes were, to adopt a metaphor of the era, complex "machines," finely tuned over time by planters, merchants, and officials to become more efficient at exploiting their enslaved workers and serving their empires. Using a wide range of archival evidence, The Plantation Machine traces a critical half-century in the development of the social, economic, and political frameworks that made these societies possible. Trevor Burnard and John Garrigus find deep and unexpected similarities in these two prize colonies of empires that fought each other throughout the period. Jamaica and Saint-Domingue experienced, at nearly the same moment, a bitter feud between planters and governors, a violent conflict between masters and enslaved workers, a fateful tightening of racial laws, a steady expansion of the slave trade, and metropolitan criticism of planters' cruelty.

The core of The Plantation Machine addresses the Seven Years' War and its aftermath. The events of that period, notably a slave poisoning scare in Saint-Domingue and a near-simultaneous slave revolt in Jamaica, cemented white dominance in both colonies. Burnard and Garrigus argue that local political concerns, not emerging racial ideologies, explain the rise of distinctive forms of racism in these two societies. The American Revolution provided another imperial crisis for the beneficiaries of the plantation machine, but by the 1780s whites in each place were prospering as never before—and blacks were suffering in new and disturbing ways. The result was that Jamaica and Saint-Domingue became vitally important parts of the late eighteenth-century American empires of Britain and France.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780812224238
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Publication date: 08/10/2018
Series: The Early Modern Americas
Pages: 360
Sales rank: 937,988
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Trevor Burnard is Wilberforce Professor of Slavery and Emancipation and Director of the Wilberforce Institute, University of Hull. He is author of Mastery, Tyranny, and Desire: Thomas Thistlewood and His Slaves in the Anglo-Jamaican World. John Garrigus is Professor of History at the University of Texas at Arlington and author of Before Haiti: Race and Citizenship in French Saint-Domingue.

Table of Contents

1 A Comparative History of Jamaica and Saint-Domingue 1

2 The Plantation World 25

3 Urban Life 50

4 The Seven Years' War in the West Indies 82

5 Dangerous Internal Enemies 101

6 Racial Reconfigurations Before the American Revolution 137

7 Tile Golden Age of the Plantocracy 164

8 The American Revolution in the Greater Antilles 192

9 Recovery and Consolidation in the 1780s 219

10 The Ancien Régime in the Greater Antilles 244

Notes 269

Index 335

Acknowledgments 349

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