Unruly Convicts, Disorder, & Shifting Moral Responsibility in the British Atlantic
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Presented by
Massachusetts Historical Society
This seminar will workshop a work in progress.
The event is hybrid and free of charge. An in-person reception will begin at 4:30 PM.
Please visit here to register.
This draft chapter interrogates the shifting moral attitudes, social critiques, and practices regarding eighteenth-century transported convicts, and it explores the discursive overlap with debates on punishment and African chattel slavery. Colonists criticized convict servants as immoral contagions of crime and depravity; however, British policymakers could not agree on an alternative punishment to transportation. White authorities and convicts themselves also distanced servitude from racialized enslaving practices, but these efforts had the reverse effect; the discourse on convicts cast a brighter light on the brutal conditions in African slavery and unfreedom. While convict servitude was shaped by imperial policy, it was also a distinct practice and rhetorical tool in the deliberations on colonial labor, linking developing ideas of moral sentiment and accountability in transatlantic discourse.