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Index
Cover Title Page Copyright Dedication Contents Introduction Preface 1. ‘Those kinde of people’
Africans in Britannia Africans in Scotland Africans in England Queen Elizabeth’s response A Khoi-khoin in England
2. ‘Necessary Implements’
Sugar and slavery Chattels and status symbols Pageant performers
3. Britain’s slave ports
A profitable business The slave-merchants of Bristol and Liverpool London as a slave port: the West India lobby Competition Quality control Black people in the slave ports The slave ports’ self-image
4. The black community takes shape
Early black organizations Black people at work Asians in Britain Black musicians
5. Eighteenth-century voices
Ukawsaw Gronniosaw Phillis Wheatley Ignatius Sancho Ottobah Cugoano Olaudah Equiano
6. Slavery and the law
The legal pendulum Granville Sharp challenges the slave-owners The Somerset case Slavery and the Scottish law Mass murder on the high seas The Grace Jones case
7. The rise of English racism
Race prejudice and racism The demonology of race Plantocracy racism Pseudo-scientific racism
8. Up from slavery
The black poor Resistance and self-emancipation Abolitionists and radicals The black radicals The everyday struggle, 1787-1833
9. Challenges to empire
William Cuffay Mary Seacole Ira Aldridge Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Challenges from Asia The rise of Pan-Africanism Black workers and soldiers
10. Under attack
Racism as riot: 1919 Claude McKay and the ‘Horror on the Rhine’ Defence and counter-attack Racism as colour bar Racism as riot: 1948
11. The settlers
The post-war immigration Racism as riot: 1958 Surrender to racism
12. The new generation
Born at a disadvantage Police against black people Resistance and rebellion
Appendixes
A. Letter from Olaudah Equiano to Thomas Hardy, 1792 B. Letter from William Davidson to Sarah Davidson, 1820 C. Letter from Robert Wedderburn to Francis Place, 1831 D. William Cuffay’s speech from the dock, 1848 E. J.R. Archer’s presidential address to the inaugural meeting of the African Progress Union, 1918 F. Birmingham, the metal industries, and the slave trade G. Eighteenth-century biographies H. Visitors, 1832-1919 I. Prize-fighters, 1791-1902
Notes Suggestions for further reading Index
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