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Dangerous Spirit of Liberty

The Politics of Slaves and Rebels in Early America and the West Indies, 1688-1748

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Dangerous Spirit of Liberty

By: Justin James Pope
Narrated by: Robert E Anderson
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About this listen

Justin Pope’s ground-breaking work tells the story of an era of slave unrest that swept through the Atlantic World in the first half of the 18th century. Provinces along the eastern coast of North America and around the Caribbean Sea experienced more insurrections and conspiracy trials in the 1730s and 1740s than in any period before the Age of Revolution. The governor of Jamaica warned his king that slaves were spreading a “dangerous Spirit of Liberty” throughout the West Indies, concerns echoed by European colonists on the northern mainland. This book explains the causes behind this rash of insurrections, both real and imagined, and explores the consequences for the peoples of the eighteenth-century Atlantic World.

Dangerous Spirit of Liberty's distinguishing feature is its focus on the role of communication in the development of a rebellious early 18th century Atlantic. Slaves found ways to share news across provinces to great effect. This book reveals new evidence of slave communication networks and shows how people of African ancestry shared rumors of emancipation and rebellion in this period. Slaves laboring in colonial commerce and working aboard ships helped foster an increasingly restive Black community. Banished slaves, convicted conspirators accused of plotting insurrection, carried their experiences with them in exile to neighboring colonies. By reconstructing the path of news, the book reveals rumors and reports that particularly resonated among slaves in the early 18th century.

The book is published by University of Missouri Press. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks.

©2025 The Curators of the University of Missouri (P)2026 Redwood Audiobooks
18th Century Africa Americas Caribbean & West Indies Colonial Period Modern United States Caribbean
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