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About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Note: Scott's birth certificate gives the middle name "Sherard". Wikipedia and the NY Times use "Sherrod".

Works by Julius S. Scott, III

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Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Scott, Julius S., III
Legal name
Scott, Julius Sherard, III
Birthdate
1955-07-31
Date of death
2021-12-06
Gender
male
Education
Brown University (BA | History)
Duke University (PhD)
Occupations
historian
Afroamerican and African Studies professor, University of Michigan
Relationships
Renne, Elisha P. (partner)
Cause of death
complications of diabetes
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Marshall, Texas, USA
Place of death
Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Map Location
USA
Disambiguation notice
Note: Scott's birth certificate gives the middle name "Sherard". Wikipedia and the NY Times use "Sherrod".

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
This is a worthy companion piece to CLR James’s Black Jacobins, which immortalised Toussaint L’Ouverture and the successful slave revolt in the French Caribbean colony of Saint Domingue (now Haiti) in the 1790s. The book’s core brings to life the everyday resistance that often gets lost when recording revolutions. The slave owners were terrified of the slaves’ endlessly creative ways of spreading news. The existence across the Caribbean of “masterless” free black people made it show more harder for owners to control their slaves. The owners hated the Jamaican “higglers” — free black women who travelled around plantations buying produce from slaves to sell in cities, and also spreading news.

The Common Wind is a remarkable piece of research, combining news reports, letters and treaties. Scott shows how both racism and resistance flow and shift. It is shocking that this wonderful book, written 30 years ago, has only just been published.

People of mixed heritage — known as mulattoes — were important to networks of resistance, as were the maroons — originally escaped slaves and local people who had fled European domination and set up their own communities. The escaped slave Brutus defiantly turned up at an end of a harvest ball for slaves in Jamaica. He “scoffed at his owner’s attempts to recapture him” and called on slaves to join him in a new maroon town.

An attempt to bulk up “white” Jamaica by importing English and Irish indentured servants — often prisoners — backfired. In 1718 the governor complained, “The greatest part of them are gone and have induced others to go with them a pirating and have inveigled and encouraged several negroes to desert their masters.”

Scott examines black people’s constant interaction with “masterless” poor whites and pirates. African women in Saint Domingue referred to each other as “sailors”, a term they picked up from pirates, who used it as a term of solidarity.
Once the revolution had started other states, including the US, became keen to stop refugees bringing their slaves and the revolutionary ideas that they had picked up. French troops were sent to quell unrest in Saint Domingue. In the period, before the more radical Jacobins supported the slaves’ call for the abolition of slavery, that meant supporting the slave owners. Officers informed the troops that the slogan written on their banner “Live Free or Die” was unsuitable — because the slaves would take it seriously.

As years passed crowds formed in ports across the Caribbean whenever a mail boat arrived, frantic to hear the news from France as the tide shifted first to the abolition of slavery and later under Napoleon to its return.

Elsewhere newspapers carrying revolutionary news were banned. The real danger in these ideas was exposed in Louisiana in 1811, when up to 500 rebel slaves marched on New Orleans, burning plantations. Their leader was Charles Deslondes, a “free mulatto from St Domingo”. They were defeated, but this was the biggest slave uprising on the north American mainland. Its memory terrified plantation owners in the southern states until slavery was abolished.

Ken Olende, Socialist Review 443, February 2019
https://socialistworker.co.uk/socialist-review-archive/common-wind/
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This is a beautifully written, brilliantly researched study on the circulation of anti-slavery news and experiences around the Caribbean and the Atlantic, with a focus on the central importance of the Haitian Revolution and its impact on Jamaica and other islands...

Awards

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Associated Authors

Eric Williams Contributor
Steven Hahn Contributor
Rebecca J. Scott Contributor
João José Reis Contributor
Ira Berlin Contributor
Kenneth Bilby Contributor
David Barry Gaspar Contributor
Richard Gray Contributor
Emily Clark Contributor
Richard Sheridan Contributor
Neville A. T. Hall Contributor
Matt D. Childs Contributor
John K. Thronton Contributor

Statistics

Works
4
Members
221
Popularity
#101,334
Rating
½ 4.3
Reviews
2
ISBNs
11
Languages
1

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