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Harvest years? Reconfigurations of empire in Jamaica, 1756-1807

Burnard, Trevor

Authors



Abstract

At the end of the Seven Years' War, Jamaican planters were in an extremely strong position within the British Empire. Immensely wealthy, geopolitically important and constitutionally assertive, Jamaican planters used their strong position to win a series of political battles against colonial governors in the 1750s and 1760s. In doing so, they justified their self-asserted claims to being entitled to British rights and privileges. Nevertheless, contemporaneous developments in metropolitan thinking about empire and white people's place in empire undermined planters' fond estimation of their position within empire. British thinkers came to see British West Indians, especially during and after the American Revolution, not as fellow citizens but as imperial subjects. The result was a cultural and ideological crisis for Jamaican planters as abolitionism emerged as a powerful political force, in which their insistence that they were British and entitled to the rights and privileges of Britons was not accepted. Thus, white Jamaicans became the first in a long line of settler peoples of British descent to have their claims to Britishness denied by metropolitan opinion. This article thus contributes to a developing discussion about settler constitutional rights within the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British Empire. © 2012 Taylor & Francis.

Citation

Burnard, T. (2012). Harvest years? Reconfigurations of empire in Jamaica, 1756-1807. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 40(4), 533-555. https://doi.org/10.1080/03086534.2012.724234

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Oct 26, 2012
Publication Date Nov 1, 2012
Deposit Date Apr 1, 2022
Journal Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History
Print ISSN 0308-6534
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 40
Issue 4
Pages 533-555
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/03086534.2012.724234
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/3579685