Project description
Understanding slavery’s history and current state
According to historiography, the various methods of enslavement played a crucial role in determining how the slaves resisted and were treated during enslavement. Although these connections have not been thoroughly examined, doing so is essential for gaining a better understanding of the history and current state of slavery. In this context, the ERC-funded GlobSlav project studies the impact of responses to enslavement on patterns of slave trade, labelling and treatment, as well as strategies of the enslaved across the Indian Ocean, Indonesian archipelago and Atlantic Ocean. The project employs a global (micro)historical approach to study the voices of enslaved individuals and other actors in colonial court records. The rich digitised colonial archives enable the analysis of court records using proven qualitative methods.
Objective
Historiography suggests that the different ways in which people were enslaved (e.g. through war, kidnapping, debt, birth) mattered greatly for how they resisted and were treated under slavery. These links remain largely unexplored, but are vital to re-understanding the history and present of slavery. This project studies how responses to modes of enslavement impacted i) slave trade patterns, ii) labelling and treatment, and iii) strategies of enslaved across the Indian Ocean, Indonesian archipelago and Atlantic.
The project employs a global (micro)historical approach to study the uniquely detailed material from colonial court records containing voices of enslaved and other actors as witnesses, victims or accused. These provide a lens on modes of enslavement, practices of slavery and strategies of enslaved that surface both ‘transgressions’ and the considered ‘normal’, creating multiplicities of views on ‘circumstances’ and ‘backgrounds’. Indexation and proven qualitative methods are used to analyse the court records. The rich and increasing digitized colonial archives allow for contextualization strategies and expanding on innovative digital research infrastructure (GLOBALISE).
The project team tackles key cases related to the key European empires (Portuguese, Spanish, French, English, Dutch). Fruitful team synergy is created by ‘light’ collective efforts that allow connecting, comparing and analyzing research results from the subprojects (e.g. on the same groups of enslaved, as Balinese, Pulaya or Malagasy, as they occur in different case study regions and archives).
The project bridges historiographic gaps between the Indian Ocean and Indonesian archipelago (‘East’) and Atlantic (‘West’). It revisits our understanding of slavery by innovating debates on: i) the global context of nationalized narratives of slavery history, ii) the impact of enslavement in relation to different slavery regimes, and iii) the ‘uniqueness’ of Atlantic slavery and racialization.
Fields of science (EuroSciVoc)
CORDIS classifies projects with EuroSciVoc, a multilingual taxonomy of fields of science, through a semi-automatic process based on NLP techniques.
CORDIS classifies projects with EuroSciVoc, a multilingual taxonomy of fields of science, through a semi-automatic process based on NLP techniques.
- humanitieshistory and archaeologyhistory
- social scienceslawhuman rightshuman rights violationshuman trafficking
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Keywords
Programme(s)
- HORIZON.1.1 - European Research Council (ERC) Main Programme
Funding Scheme
HORIZON-ERC - HORIZON ERC GrantsHost institution
1011 JV AMSTERDAM
Netherlands