Rise Up

Resistance, Revolution, Abolition

Rise Up cover

Rise Up

Resistance, Revolution, Abolition

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Pre-order. Available Sep 02 2025
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Description

Drawing on new research, centring Black voices and perspectives, and celebrating Black Cambridge history, Rise Up focuses on the period from 1750 to 1850, when Britain became the world's first industrialised nation and one of history's largest empires. At the same time, Britain played a central role in the Atlantic slave trade, trafficking more captive African people than any other European power. Millions were forcibly abducted and transported to work on British-owned plantations in the Caribbean and Americas.

In Britain, Black and white anti-slaverygroups and individuals campaigned for abolition. Despite opposition, laws were gradually enacted to abolish the slave trade in 1807, and enslavement in 1833. However, other exploitative systems including apprenticeship and indentured labour took their place. Financial compensation was awarded to former enslavers while the formerly enslaved received nothing.

This is the story of the fight to end Atlantic slavery, its aftermath and ongoing legacies. It is told through the stories of individuals from across the Black Atlantic - many silenced or pushed to the margins. It interrogates historic objects and artworks from collections across the University of Cambridge and beyond, in conversation with responses from contemporary artists. Despite the passing of almost two centuries since Britain outlawed slavery, the struggles for autonomy, equality and social justice continue today.

Table of Contents

Foreword - Luke Syson, Director of the Fitzwilliam Museum
Introduction
Dark finance: the intertwined history of slavery and abolition at the University of Cambridge - Sabine F. Cadeau
Introducing Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, The African - Victoria Avery

1. OPPRESSION AND RESISTANCE
Seeing against the grain - Mathelinda Nabugodi
Olaudah Equiano's roots
The 'Africa Trade'
Life on British Caribbean plantations
Forms of resistance
2. THE BRITISH ANTI-SLAVE TRADE CAMPAIGN
Breaking through: Black Georgian voices
Cambridge connections
Olaudah Equiano and Cambridge - Victoria Avery
Ongoing abolition campaigning
3. BRITAIN'S COLONIES IN NOVA SCOTIA AND SIERRA LEONE
Nova Scotia: northern exposure
Sierra Leone: the 'province of freedom'?
4. REVOLUTIONS IN THE CARRIBEAN
Creation of Haiti: republic and kingdom
Cambridge and Haiti: slavery, the Haitian Revolution and British abolitionism - Sabine F. Cadeau
Tipping points: Barbados, Guyana and Jamaica
5. ENDING BRITISH SLAVERY
Women's activism
Freedom at last?
Celebrating Black Cambridge history
MOVING FORWARD
I'll think of a title after I write - Wanja Kimani
Touching the void: on becoming an art historian and reckoning with slavery at Cambridge - Temi Odumosu

Contributors
Acknowledgements
Picture credits
Index

Product details

Published Sep 02 2025
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 208
ISBN 9781781301357
Imprint Philip Wilson Publishers
Illustrations Beautifully illustrated with over 150 colour images
Dimensions 246 x 189 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Volume Editor

Victoria Avery

Victoria Avery has been Keeper of European Sculptu…

Volume Editor

Wanja Kimani

Wanja Kimani is a visual artist, writer and curato…

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