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A voice for slaves: The office of the fiscal in berbice and the beginning of protection in the british empire, 1819–1834

Burnard, Trevor

Authors



Abstract

© 2018 by the Pacific Coast Branch, American Historical Association. All rights reserved. This article examines the office of the Fiscal in Berbice (later British Guiana) between 1819 and 1834—a period encompassing amelioration and emancipation. It looks in particular at the lives and concerns of enslaved women as revealed in an extraordinary set of slave testimonies collected as part of the Fiscal’s duties. It outlines the peculiar nature of the Office of the Fiscal and how it allowed enslaved women a voice to complain about aspects of their treatment under slavery in a particularly harsh slave regime. It connects this office also to a developing ideology of ‘‘protection’’ to be extended to non-whites in the British Empire in the second and third decades of the nineteenth century. Using the concept of ‘‘moral economy’’ as developed many years ago by E.P. Thompson to analyse early nineteenth-century British working class culture and as extended by Emilia Viotta Da Costa to Demerara and Berbice, it suggests that enslaved women had clear expectations of what could be rightfully expected of them and what were unjust demands within a slave system designed to keep enslaved women in their place.

Citation

Burnard, T. (2018). A voice for slaves: The office of the fiscal in berbice and the beginning of protection in the british empire, 1819–1834. Pacific Historical Review, 87(1), 30-53. https://doi.org/10.1525/phr.2018.87.1.30

Journal Article Type Review
Online Publication Date Feb 1, 2018
Publication Date Dec 1, 2018
Deposit Date May 26, 2021
Journal Pacific Historical Review
Print ISSN 0030-8684
Electronic ISSN 1533-8584
Publisher University of California Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 87
Issue 1
Pages 30-53
DOI https://doi.org/10.1525/phr.2018.87.1.30
Keywords Berbice; Fiscal; Protection; Enslaved women; Slave testimony; Moral economy; Punishment; Law
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/3579617