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Book Cover
E-book
Author Wickramasinghe, Nira, author.

Title Slave in a palanquin : colonial servitude and resistance in Sri Lanka / Nira Wickramasinghe
Published New York : Columbia University Press, [2020]

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Description 1 online resource : illustrations (some color), maps
Contents Intro -- Table of Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. A Dutch Fiscal's Murder: Interrogating the Identity of Slaves, Blacks, and "Kaffirs" -- 2. From Colombo to Galle: Enslaved Bodies in an Archive of Violence -- 3. Slave in a Palanquin: Jaffna in the Early Nineteenth Century -- 4. The Chilaw "Experiment": Labor for Freedom -- 5. The Plaint of an Emancipated Slave: A Play in Two Acts -- 6. Eclipse of the Slave: Traces, Hauntings -- Glossary -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary "From the very early days of the Western colonial project, the island of Sri Lanka was a crucial stopping point in the Indian Ocean. For four hundred years, Sri Lanka transferred from the Portuguese, to the Dutch, to the British, serving for all of them as a crossroads in transnational trade in the imperial period. Often overlooked is the extent to which this island became a waystation in colonists' Indian Ocean slave trade, with enslaved Africans coming to work on island plantations there and Sri Lankans exported to other colonies as forced labor 'coolies.' Recovering the individual voices of enslaved people in this unique locale, Slave in a Palanquin explores how slavery in the Indian Ocean world was just as embedded in the fabric of everyday life and in transnational encounters as it was in its far more prominent Atlantic Ocean cousin. Scholars have argued that the fact that there were fewer slaves in places like Sri Lanka than in the Americas, and that the region had a tradition of temporarily bonded labor, means no real slave trade activity of any consequence existed there, but Nira Wickramasinghe draws upon archival sources to dispute these false memories and false equivalencies. Further, the book demonstrates that even though the official end of slavery in Sri Lanka and the surrounding region came early, in 1844, and without devastating revolutions like those in Haiti and the United States, the transition was by no means painless. Instead of leading to real emancipation, she argues, the end of formal slavery led to an ambivalent freedom filled with bonded plantation labor and indentured servitude, with lasting negative consequences. A true subaltern history, this book rethinks not only the local history of colonial Sri Lanka but also the history of the Indian Ocean world"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes John F. Richards Prize, 2021
Online resource; title from PDF title page (JSTOR, viewed February 11, 2021)
Subject Slavery -- Sri Lanka -- History
Enslaved persons -- Sri Lanka -- History
HISTORY / Asia / India & South Asia.
Slavery
Enslaved persons
SUBJECT Sri Lanka -- History -- 1505-1948. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85127137
Subject Sri Lanka
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2020006926
ISBN 9780231552264
0231552262