John Wiley & Sons We Slaves of Suriname Cover Anton de Kom's We Slaves of Suriname is a literary masterpiece as well as a fierce indictment of rac.. Product #: 978-1-5095-4901-6 Regular price: $57.85 $57.85 Auf Lager

We Slaves of Suriname

de Kom, Anton

Übersetzt von McKay, David

Cover

1. Auflage Januar 2022
200 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-5095-4901-6
John Wiley & Sons

Kurzbeschreibung

Anton de Kom's We Slaves of Suriname is a literary masterpiece as well as a fierce indictment of racism and colonialism. In this classic book, published here in English for the first time, the Surinamese writer and resistance leader recounts the history of his homeland, from the first settlements by Europeans in search of gold through the era of the slave trade and the period of Dutch colonial rule, when the old slave mentality persisted, long after slavery had been formally abolished.

159 years after the abolition of slavery in Suriname and 88 years after its initial publication, We Slaves of Suriname has lost none of its brilliance and power.

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Anton de Kom's We Slaves of Suriname is a literary masterpiece as well as a fierce indictment of racism and colonialism. In this classic book, published here in English for the first time, the Surinamese writer and resistance leader recounts the history of his homeland, from the first settlements by Europeans in search of gold through the era of the slave trade and the period of Dutch colonial rule, when the old slave mentality persisted, long after slavery had been formally abolished.

159 years after the abolition of slavery in Suriname and 88 years after its initial publication, We Slaves of Suriname has lost none of its brilliance and power.

Translator's Note

Introductions

Frimangron by Tessa Leuwsha

The Breath of Freedom by Duco van Oostrum

Why Anton de Kom Still Inspires Generation after Generation by Mitchell Esajas

Foreword by Judith de Kom

We Slaves of Suriname

"Sranan," our fatherland

The era of slavery

The arrival of the whites

El Dorado

The first settlements

The Dutch regime

The slave trade

The market

Enslaved

The slave woman

The masters

The punishments

The History of Our Nation

Van Aerssen van Sommelsdyck (1683-1688)

The brutes

The forest expeditions

Johan Jacob Mauricius (1742-1751)

Governor Crommelin (1752-1768)

Governor Nepveu (1770-1779)

Buku (decayed into dust)

The final chapter for the resistance

Suriname under British rule

The great fire

The fate of the ethical

White settlement

Fighting the current

Governors on parade

The abolition of slavery

Freedom?

The great sellout

The era of freedom

How we live

The essence of autonomy

Fin de siècle

Indentured labor

Free labor

In search of gold

The major crops

What becomes of those millions?

Results

Reunion and farewell

Notes

Glossary of Surinamese terms

Index
A New Statesman Book of the Year

Selected as a Best Book of 2022 by Public Books


"one of the most important works of twentieth-century anticolonial literature."
LSE Review of Books
"De Kom is to Suriname what Mandela is to South Africa: a heroic patriot, an advocate of the oppressed, and a symbol of resistance against colonialism."
Unherd
"Heart-breaking... he succeeds in bringing to painful life the savagery of what is now widely considered the most vicious colonization project ever."
New Internationalist

"Almost ninety years after its first appearance, We Slaves of Suriname is still an exemplary description and analysis of Suriname's history, which has not lost its power of expression. From micro to macro situations, De Kom displays phenomenal psychological insight and an acute sense of the driving forces of class and race."
Gloria Wekker, Professor Emerita, Utrecht University
"We Slaves of Suriname is both an analysis of Suriname's postcolonial predicament and an insurgent commentary on the archives of Dutch writing about Suriname... By interrogating the crater left by colonialism in the landscape of modernity, De Kom produces a text that speaks, avant la lettre, directly to postcolonial concerns."
Postcolonial Studies Journal
"An astounding work of lyrical fury ... De Kom is a towering radical and anticolonial figure, and this book a painful masterpiece."
China Miéville, New Statesman
"a classic of anticolonial Black leftist thought"
Public Books
Anton de Kom was a leading advocate of Surinamese independence from Dutch colonial rule. Born in Paramaribo, Suriname, on February 22, 1898, he was banished by the colonial authorities in 1933; he wrote We Slaves of Suriname from exile in the Netherlands, where it was first published in 1934. When World War II broke out, De Kom joined the Dutch resistance; he was arrested by the Germans in 1944 and deported to the Neuengamme concentration camp, where he died on April 24, 1945. In June 2020, Anton de Kom was added to the Dutch national core curriculum for history education (the Canon of the Netherlands) because of his central role in opposing racism and colonialism.