An examination of the 1808 international slave
trade ban and its impact on the American South and
Atlantic World
In March 1807, within a few weeks of each other,
both the United States and the United Kingdom
passed laws banning the international slave trade. Two
hundred years later, Great Britain, an instigator of
the slave trade and the chief source of slaves sold into
continental North America, was awash nationwide in
commemorations of the ban. By contrast the bicentennial
of the ban received almost no attention in the
United States. Ambiguous Anniversary aims to remedy
that omission and to explain the discrepancy between
the two commemorative responses. Edited by David
T. Gleeson and Simon Lewis, this volume examines
the impact that closing the international slave trade in
1808 had on Southern American economics, politics,
and society.
Recasting the history of slavery in the early
Republic and the memory of slavery and abolition in
American culture, the foreword, introduction, and ten
essays in this volume present a complex picture of an
important but partial step in America's long struggle
toward the ambitious but ambiguous goal of liberty
and justice for all.
A native of Ireland, David T. Gleeson is a reader in
history in the School of Arts and Social Sciences at
Northumbria University in Newcastle upon Tyne
and a former director of the College of Charleston's
Carolina Lowcountry and Atlantic World program.
He is the editor of The Irish in the Atlantic World.
Simon Lewis is a professor of world literature at the
College of Charleston, where he is also an associate
director of the Carolina Lowcountry and Atlantic
World program. Lewis is the author of White Women
Writers and Their African Invention and British and
African Literature in Transnational Context.
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