001488635 000__ 05079nam\\2200601\i\4500 001488635 001__ 1488635 001488635 003__ DLC 001488635 005__ 20240321003137.0 001488635 006__ m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ 001488635 007__ cr\cn\nnnunnun 001488635 008__ 230824t20242024enk\\\\\ob\\\\001\0\eng\d 001488635 010__ $$a 2023033823 001488635 020__ $$a9781804293423 001488635 020__ $$a1804293423 001488635 020__ $$a9781804293430 001488635 020__ $$a1804293431 001488635 020__ $$z9781804293416 001488635 040__ $$aNhCcYBP$$cNhCcYBP 001488635 042__ $$apcc 001488635 043__ $$as-bl---$$anwcu---$$an-usu-- 001488635 050_4 $$aHT1126$$b.B53 2024 001488635 08200 $$a306.3/620981$$223/eng/20231031 001488635 1001_ $$aBlackburn, Robin,$$eauthor. 001488635 24514 $$aThe reckoning :$$bFrom the second slavery to abolition, 1776-1888 /$$cRobin Blackburn. 001488635 24630 $$aFrom the second slavery to abolition, 1776-1888 001488635 264_1 $$aLondon ;$$aNew York :$$bVerso,$$c2024. 001488635 264_4 $$c©2024 001488635 300__ $$a1 online resource 001488635 336__ $$atext$$btxt$$2rdacontent 001488635 337__ $$acomputer$$bc$$2rdamedia 001488635 338__ $$aonline resource$$bcr$$2rdacarrier 001488635 504__ $$aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 001488635 5050_ $$aCover Page -- Halftitle Page -- Title Page -- Dedication -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction: Why the 'Second Slavery'? -- Patterns of the 'First Slavery' -- Slave-Holding Survivors: The American South, Brazil, Cuba -- Distinctiveness of the Second Slavery -- Slavery, Credit and Collateral -- Fortifications of the Second Slavery -- Part I: Westwards Expansion -- Chapter One: American Pioneers of the Second Slavery -- Contested Origins of the United States -- The US Constitution and Slavery -- An Abolition Moment? -- The Northwest Ordinance and Militia Act 001488635 5050_ $$aFrom the Haitian Revolution to the Louisiana Purchase -- Birth of the White Man's Republic -- Indian Removal and the German Coast Revolt -- The Price of Compromise -- The Missouri Controversy -- Slavery Outlasts the Atlantic Trade -- Chapter Two: The Making of the Hispano-Cuban Elite -- A Cuban Miracle? -- Cuba as a 'Society with Slaves' -- The British in Havana -- The Hispano-Cuban Reconquest of Florida -- The Great Slave Revolt in Saint-Domingue -- The Plantation Surge -- Cuba as a Slave Society -- The Colonial Pact -- A Model Colony? 001488635 5050_ $$aChapter Three: Brazil: Independence, Monarchy, Slavery and Citizenship -- Patterns of Race and Slavery -- Mercantilism's End and a New Slave Trade Boom -- Stirrings of Independence and Anti-slavery -- The Last Days of Colonial Brazil -- Adherence to the Emperor -- Liberty, Pacification and Terror in Bahia -- Pedro I's Setbacks and Abdication -- The Regency and the Slave Trade -- Brazil and Backwardness -- Romanticism and 'Natural History' -- Power Was Everything -- Brazil Ends the Slave Trade -- Chapter Four: Life and Toil on the Slave Plantation -- Racial Capitalism and the Chattel Principle 001488635 5050_ $$aA Multitude of Tasks -- 'Vigilance Without Punishment Is an Illusion' -- The Productivity of Gang Labour -- The Slave-Holder as Colonist and Potentate -- Natural Economy and the Reproduction of the Slave Population -- Chapter Five: Slave-Owner Capitalism, Credit and Westwards Expansion -- Slave-Holders and Modernity -- Dimensions of the Plantation Boom -- Slavery Away from the Plantations -- Credit is King? -- Mechanization and its Limits -- The Special Case of Sugar Processing -- Accounting for Slavery -- Planters Ride the Business Cycle -- Slave Dealers Become Sugar Lords 001488635 5050_ $$aHow Cotton Paid for Empire -- Appendix: Slave-Related Atlantic Trade, Including Re-exports -- Part II: How the Slave Owners Lost -- Chapter Six: War, Peace and Slavery, 1815-60 -- Mechanics of the Congress System -- Conservative Reaction and Bourgeois Advance -- The Vienna Congress and the Slave Trade -- Latin America, Britain and the Monroe Doctrine -- A Congress of the Americas? -- The Fate of Cuba -- Brazil, Britain and the Upshot of 1850 -- The Diplomacy of Bullies -- Filibustering in Texas and Cuba -- Mutations of the Peace -- Chapter Seven: Anti-slavery and the Origins of the Civil War 001488635 506__ $$aAccess limited to authorized users 001488635 533__ $$aElectronic reproduction.$$bAnn Arbor, MI$$nAvailable via World Wide Web. 001488635 588__ $$aDescription based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on March 07, 2024). 001488635 650_0 $$aSlavery$$zBrazil$$xHistory$$y19th century.$$xColonization$$0(DLC)sh 85001937 001488635 650_0 $$aSlavery$$zCuba$$xHistory$$y19th century.$$xColonization$$0(DLC)sh 85001937 001488635 650_0 $$aSlavery$$zSouthern States$$xHistory$$y19th century.$$xColonization$$0(DLC)sh 85001937 001488635 655_0 $$aElectronic books 001488635 7102_ $$aProQuest (Firm) 001488635 77608 $$iPrint version:$$aBlackburn, Robin.$$tReckoning$$dLondon ; New York : Verso, 2024$$z9781804293416$$w(DLC) 2023033822 001488635 852__ $$bebk 001488635 85640 $$3GOBI DDA$$uhttps://univsouthin.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/usiricelib-ebooks/detail.action?docID=30735456$$zOnline Access 001488635 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:1488635$$pGLOBAL_SET 001488635 980__ $$aBIB 001488635 980__ $$aEBOOK 001488635 982__ $$aEbook 001488635 983__ $$aOnline