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xvii, 622 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : chiefly color illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
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Chapter 1: Overboard -- Chapter 2: Landing -- Chapter 3: Flight -- Chapter 4: Alliances -- Chapter 5: Plots -- Chapter 6: Pirates -- Chapter 7: Adjustments -- Chapter 8: Expansion -- Chapter 9: Hinterlands -- Chapter 10: Overthrow -- Chapter 11: Eruptions -- Chapter 12: Codes -- Chapter 13: Accelerations -- Chapter 14: Connections -- Chapter 15: Borders -- Chapter 16: Poison -- Chapter 17: Quills -- Chapter 18: Revolutions -- Chapter 19: Liberties -- Chapter 20: Vengeance -- Chapter 21: Escalations -- Chapter 22: Openings -- Chapter 23: Endings -- Chapter 24: Royalty -- Chapter 25: Opportunities -- Chapter 26: Visions -- Chapter 27: Decisions -- Chapter 28: Safety -- Chapter 29: Finale -- Chapter 30: Liberation -- Chapter 31: Lashings -- Chapter 32: Repeat -- Chapter 33: Reckoning -- Chapter 34: Transformations -- Chapter 35: Flowering -- Epilogue: Beginnings
""Among the emancipators are the millions whose stories will never be known. They lived the struggle. They were the great resistance." Thus does acclaimed historian Carrie Gibson conclude her magisterial chronicle of four centuries of effort by enslaved people in the western hemisphere to gain their freedom. "Freedom is an idea," she writes, and the actions of the thousands who fought to escape slavery made clear that "freedom had to be for everyone, otherwise it was a lie." The horrific enslavement by Europeans of twelve million Africans taken to the Americas has been widely written about, and important individual slave revolts have been recorded; but Gibson tells a larger story, portraying the multitude of freedom struggles across the entire hemisphere--from North America to the Caribbean to Brazil--as one long-running quest for freedom. From the first African revolt in 1521 on the island of Hispaniola, to the 18th-century Maroon Wars on Jamaica and the revolution that gave Haiti its independence, and thousands of smaller acts of defiance in between, Gibson vividly chronicles the continuum of resistance that eventually ended the slave trade and, with Brazil's decision in 1888, the institution of slavery itself. This was the most diverse ongoing insurrection the world has ever known, and the way it was responded to shaped every nation in the Americas in meaningful ways. "If scholars were to emphasize the efforts of the enslaved more than the condition of slavery," historian Vincent Brown has written, "we might at least tell richer stories about how the endeavors of the weakest and most abject have at times reshaped the world." With its deep scholarship and rich narrative, The Great Resistance is a major contribution to the literature around slavery and freedom and, in our time, a tribute to the persistence of the human spirit to overcome even the darkest of circumstances." -- cover