Criticism > Literary Criticism (1400-1800) > The Slave Trade in British and American Literature - Deidre Coleman (essay date 1994)

The Slave Trade in British and American Literature - Deidre Coleman (essay date 1994)

Deidre Coleman (essay date 1994)

SOURCE: “Conspicuous Consumption: White Abolitionism and English Women's Protest Writing in the 1780s,” in ELH, Vol. 61, No. 2, Summer 1994, pp. 341-62.

[In the following essay, Coleman examines late eighteenth-century British texts discussing slavery and women's rights, and notes that even liberal-minded white writers sought to preserve what they viewed as the essential boundaries between whites and blacks.]

In this paper I wish to examine two overlapping areas of middle-class polemmic from the 1790s: white abolitionism and English women's protest writing. A certain polarization has crept into recent discussions of abolitionism, with some critics arguing that a relatively benign “cultural racism” in the eighteenth century came to be supplanted by a more aggressive biological racism.1 Patrick Brantlinger, for instance, characterizes late eighteenth-century abolitionist writing as more...

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