Author: Salman, Michael Title: The Embarrassment of Slavery : Controversies Over Bondage and Nationalism in the American Colonial Philippines
Description: Berkeley [CA], Univ. of California Press, (2001). orig.wrappers. 23x15cm, xi,335 pp. PAPERBACK.. Minor rubbing. VG. ¶ A series of controversies over the existence and meaning of slavery shaped American colonialism and nationalist resistance in the Philippines. While American officials claimed colonialism would free Filipinos from various forms of slavery and American anti-imperialists countered that colonialism itself would constitute new kinds of bondage, the first generation of Filipino nationalists had already appropriated anti-slavery rhetoric in their struggles with Spanish colonialism in the late 19th century. From these contentions about slavery as a political metaphor, new disputes erupted when American officials "discovered" the practice of slavery among minority groups, such as the Moro (Muslim) societies of the southern Philippines and animist groups in upland northern Luzon. Michael Salman reconstructs these controversies and charts the successive emergence of slavery as an embarrassment for American colonial officials, Filipino nationalists and American anti-imperialists" - Publisher's description.
Keywords: Philippines, United States, American, Colonialism, Colony Colonies, Slavery, Nationalism, Imperialism, Political History, Southeast Asia
Price: US$ 27.00 Seller: Expatriate Bookshop of Denmark
- Book number: BOOKS017251I