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1.4: African Writers and Abolitionists in England and the Colonies

  • Page ID
    187973
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    The African and Black presence in Britain: New Writing, Ideas and Challenges to Slavery

    Despite restrictions on Black social mobility and education a handful of African writers living in Britain introduced Black thought into the English language for the first time and began to challenge the degraded notions of human diversity prevalent during this period.

    Africans had been in Britain during the Roman occupation, and had been a visible and continuous presence since the mid 16th century and the start of the country’s involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. Whereas earlier arrivals had mostly been domestic servants of one rank or another, the 18th century saw a remarkable spike in population and an expansion of roles Black people occupied. By the 1780s Britain had a Black population of at least 20,000. Whether beggars or businessmen, seamen or soldiers, publicans or poets, writers or runaways, the Black population’s fortunes were subject not only to the ups and downs of British commerce but also to the spread of new ideas.


    1.4: African Writers and Abolitionists in England and the Colonies is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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