Slave Exports and the Politics of Slave Punishment during Colombia’s Abolition Process (1820s–1840s)

Author:

Echeverri Marcela1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Yale University USA New Haven, CT

Abstract

Abstract This article focuses on the contentious process that characterized the slow, gradual abolition of slavery in Colombia and New Granada between 1821 and 1852. I investigate how in this period slaveowners in the southwest advocated for their right to export their slaves as a form of punishment. In the foundation of the antislavery Colombian Republic, the 1821 manumission law had prohibited Colombians from participating in slave trading. Yet the slave-owning elite justified their appeal for exporting their enslaved property by claiming that selling the slaves outside of Colombian territory (New Granadan after Colombia was dissolved in 1830) was a strategy to get rid of the Afro-descendant populations, whom they considered to be dangerous to the social order. I also study how the position of the enslaved in the southwestern region was politicized both by the military dynamics and legal changes underway after independence. Justifying slave exports as a punishment of the “unruly slaves” was not only a strategy of the slaveowners to regain their capital. It was, mainly, a form of empowerment in response to the challenges they faced as a class in the context of gradual abolition, including the state’s courting of slaves through antislavery legislation.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,History

Reference69 articles.

1. Almario, Oscar. “Anotaciones sobre las provincias del Pacífico Sur durante la construcción temprana de la República de la Nueva Granada, 1823–1857.” Anuario de Historia Regional y de las Fronteras 6 (1) (2001), 120–166.

2. Alvarez Cuartero, Izaskun. “De Tihosuco a la Habana: La venta de indios yucatecos a Cuba durante la Guerra de Castas.” Studia Historica: Historia Antigua 25 (2007), 559–576.

3. Andrews, George Reid. The Afro-Argentines of Buenos Aires, 1800–1900 (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1980).

4. Barragan, Yesenia. Freedom’s Captives: Slavery and Gradual Emancipation on the Colombian Black Pacific (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2021).10.1017/9781108935890

5. Bethell, Leslie. The Abolition of the Brazilian Slave Trade: Britain, Brazil, and the Slave Trade Question, 1807–1869 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009).

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