We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Freedom of Movement, Access to the Urban Centres, and Abolition of Slavery in the French Caribbean.
- Authors
Pluskota, Marion; Fatah-Black, Karwan
- Abstract
How did the abolition of slavery influence the relations between urban centres and rural areas? How did "new" French citizens experience access to the urban environment? Based on the archives of the correctional courts, this article focuses on how race and citizenship determined the accessibility of French colonial urban spaces and institutions after 1848. The abolition of slavery in the French Antilles on 27 April 1848 led to a modification of the legal and judicial systems: the changing legal status of former slaves gave them new opportunities to move around the colonies, at least on paper. In theory, after 1848, everyone should have had freedom of social and spatial mobility and access to the urban centres and their institutions; what happened in practice, however, still needs to be researched. This article shows that the abolition exacerbated two dynamics already at play since the beginning of the nineteenth century: the control of the population and the attraction of the urban environment for the elite. The plantation system in the mid-nineteenth century was suffering both economically and politically: the newly acquired freedom and possible migration of former slaves to the towns (Saint-Pierre and Fort-de-France in Martinique, Pointe-à-Pitre and Basse-Terre in Guadeloupe) threatened to destabilize the system of private justice as well as the economic apparatus. To counteract these legal changes, vagrancy laws were implemented to restrict citizens' mobility while, at the same time, the white elite's discourse on urban spaces changed from them being seen as a hotbed for revolutionary ideas to representing a safe environment to which access needed to be restricted.
- Subjects
HISTORY of slavery; INNER cities; FREEDOM of movement; SLAVERY laws; PLANTATIONS
- Publication
International Review of Social History, 2020, Vol 65, Issue s28, p93
- ISSN
0020-8590
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/S0020859020000103