1 online resource (vii,1 unnumbered, 105 pages) : colour illustrationsIncludes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (pages 91-105).This is a comparative study of two journalists in Nova Scotia and Jamaica respectively in the 1830s. As editors of colonial newspapers, Joseph Howe (1804-73) and Edward Jordon (1800-69) were tried for publishing seditious writings. Both were acquitted, however, in part due to their rhetoric of loyalty to Britain. Such rhetoric undermined the charges of sedition made against them and allowed them to contrast their loyalty with the apparent disloyalty of colonial elites. It also shows their place within a transatlantic network of reform. These journalists expertly manoeuvred through the complex divisions...
This study examines how events in one part of the British Empire had unintended consequences in anot...
The dominant national narrative for Canadians today is that Canada was an antislavery haven for form...
PhDLower Canada occupied a strategic position in Britain's policies for the defence, trade and sett...
In 1835, Joseph Howe was prosecuted for criminal libel after an attack on the Halifax magistracy app...
This dissertation focuses on the constitutional politics of England, and then Britain’s, transatlant...
This thesis examines subjecthood in British North America during the late eighteenth century through...
Between 1664 and the end of enslaved labour in 1838, the volume of legislation passed by the house o...
Adding to a dynamic new wave of scholarship in Atlantic history, The Loyal Atlantic offers fresh int...
The period of the Napoleonic Wars marked the virtual extinction of the transient fishery between Eng...
Inscribed on verso of front cover: H.R. Morgan Esq. with compts of E.A. Cruikshank.Caption title
v, 195 leaves ; 28 cm.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 187-195).Online version unavailabl...
This paper argues that the writings of abolitionist Samuel Ringgold Ward and other anti-slavery grou...
This dissertation examines how news and information circulated among select colonies in the British ...
As England’s first colony, Ireland’s experience is of great significance to wider colonial studies. ...
The papers presented in this Master\u27s thesis describe two varying experiences of migration and tr...
This study examines how events in one part of the British Empire had unintended consequences in anot...
The dominant national narrative for Canadians today is that Canada was an antislavery haven for form...
PhDLower Canada occupied a strategic position in Britain's policies for the defence, trade and sett...
In 1835, Joseph Howe was prosecuted for criminal libel after an attack on the Halifax magistracy app...
This dissertation focuses on the constitutional politics of England, and then Britain’s, transatlant...
This thesis examines subjecthood in British North America during the late eighteenth century through...
Between 1664 and the end of enslaved labour in 1838, the volume of legislation passed by the house o...
Adding to a dynamic new wave of scholarship in Atlantic history, The Loyal Atlantic offers fresh int...
The period of the Napoleonic Wars marked the virtual extinction of the transient fishery between Eng...
Inscribed on verso of front cover: H.R. Morgan Esq. with compts of E.A. Cruikshank.Caption title
v, 195 leaves ; 28 cm.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 187-195).Online version unavailabl...
This paper argues that the writings of abolitionist Samuel Ringgold Ward and other anti-slavery grou...
This dissertation examines how news and information circulated among select colonies in the British ...
As England’s first colony, Ireland’s experience is of great significance to wider colonial studies. ...
The papers presented in this Master\u27s thesis describe two varying experiences of migration and tr...
This study examines how events in one part of the British Empire had unintended consequences in anot...
The dominant national narrative for Canadians today is that Canada was an antislavery haven for form...
PhDLower Canada occupied a strategic position in Britain's policies for the defence, trade and sett...