Labour, Enslavement, and Indigenous Space: Liverpool, Nova Scotia in the Atlantic World, 1759-1812

This thesis reconceptualizes the Planter and Loyalist periods around Liverpool, Nova Scotia, from 1759 to 1812. Rather than privileging the American Revolutionary War, it emphasises Indigenous space and Black people to study this shared place. Drawing on the diaries of Simeon Perkins and Mi’kmaw con...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laurie, Amber
Other Authors: Department of History, Master of Arts, n/a, Colin Mitchell, Lisa Binkley, John G. Reid, Jerry Bannister, Not Applicable, No
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/81915
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spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/81915 2023-05-15T17:12:59+02:00 Labour, Enslavement, and Indigenous Space: Liverpool, Nova Scotia in the Atlantic World, 1759-1812 Laurie, Amber Department of History Master of Arts n/a Colin Mitchell Lisa Binkley John G. Reid Jerry Bannister Not Applicable No 2022-08-30T11:24:41Z http://hdl.handle.net/10222/81915 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10222/81915 Enslavement Abolition Nova Scotia Colonialism Black Loyalists Labour Mi'kma'ki Simeon Perkins African Nova Scotians Indigenous Atlantic World Planters 2022 ftdalhouse 2022-09-03T23:10:49Z This thesis reconceptualizes the Planter and Loyalist periods around Liverpool, Nova Scotia, from 1759 to 1812. Rather than privileging the American Revolutionary War, it emphasises Indigenous space and Black people to study this shared place. Drawing on the diaries of Simeon Perkins and Mi’kmaw concepts, Msit No’kmaq and Siawa’sik, it explores how the space was re-formed with the arrival of the Planters. It also examines the development of enslavement and abolition in Liverpool through biographies to show how power imbalances informed lived experiences. This thesis argues that by de-emphasising the American Revolutionary War and loyalism narratives in the Northeast, it reveals the region was marked by power imbalances and labour relations continually being formed and re-formed. It suggests that the American Revolutionary War was not the defining moment of slaveholding in Nova Scotia, but part of a multi-phased process that grew incrementally and was sustained by settlers throughout this period. Other/Unknown Material Mi’kmaw Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository The Planter ENVELOPE(-55.715,-55.715,53.150,53.150)
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftdalhouse
language English
topic Enslavement
Abolition
Nova Scotia
Colonialism
Black Loyalists
Labour
Mi'kma'ki
Simeon Perkins
African Nova Scotians
Indigenous
Atlantic World
Planters
spellingShingle Enslavement
Abolition
Nova Scotia
Colonialism
Black Loyalists
Labour
Mi'kma'ki
Simeon Perkins
African Nova Scotians
Indigenous
Atlantic World
Planters
Laurie, Amber
Labour, Enslavement, and Indigenous Space: Liverpool, Nova Scotia in the Atlantic World, 1759-1812
topic_facet Enslavement
Abolition
Nova Scotia
Colonialism
Black Loyalists
Labour
Mi'kma'ki
Simeon Perkins
African Nova Scotians
Indigenous
Atlantic World
Planters
description This thesis reconceptualizes the Planter and Loyalist periods around Liverpool, Nova Scotia, from 1759 to 1812. Rather than privileging the American Revolutionary War, it emphasises Indigenous space and Black people to study this shared place. Drawing on the diaries of Simeon Perkins and Mi’kmaw concepts, Msit No’kmaq and Siawa’sik, it explores how the space was re-formed with the arrival of the Planters. It also examines the development of enslavement and abolition in Liverpool through biographies to show how power imbalances informed lived experiences. This thesis argues that by de-emphasising the American Revolutionary War and loyalism narratives in the Northeast, it reveals the region was marked by power imbalances and labour relations continually being formed and re-formed. It suggests that the American Revolutionary War was not the defining moment of slaveholding in Nova Scotia, but part of a multi-phased process that grew incrementally and was sustained by settlers throughout this period.
author2 Department of History
Master of Arts
n/a
Colin Mitchell
Lisa Binkley
John G. Reid
Jerry Bannister
Not Applicable
No
author Laurie, Amber
author_facet Laurie, Amber
author_sort Laurie, Amber
title Labour, Enslavement, and Indigenous Space: Liverpool, Nova Scotia in the Atlantic World, 1759-1812
title_short Labour, Enslavement, and Indigenous Space: Liverpool, Nova Scotia in the Atlantic World, 1759-1812
title_full Labour, Enslavement, and Indigenous Space: Liverpool, Nova Scotia in the Atlantic World, 1759-1812
title_fullStr Labour, Enslavement, and Indigenous Space: Liverpool, Nova Scotia in the Atlantic World, 1759-1812
title_full_unstemmed Labour, Enslavement, and Indigenous Space: Liverpool, Nova Scotia in the Atlantic World, 1759-1812
title_sort labour, enslavement, and indigenous space: liverpool, nova scotia in the atlantic world, 1759-1812
publishDate 2022
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/81915
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.715,-55.715,53.150,53.150)
geographic The Planter
geographic_facet The Planter
genre Mi’kmaw
genre_facet Mi’kmaw
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10222/81915
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