Framing Irish Complicity in Transatlantic Slavery by Brian Kelly (Mary Ann 250)
Clifton House
The powerful re-mergence of a global Black Lives Matter movement has helped propel a timely debate on how Ireland can best confront its own complicated entanglement in transatlantic slavery. A bustling port city and an emerging industrial powerhouse, nineteenth-century Belfast was home both to an influential mercantile elite eager to share in the spoils and to an outspoken abolitionist element. Against the backdrop of rising tensions in the United States, the city hosted a number of successful visits by prominent antislavery orators, including the escaped slaves Frederick Douglass and Henry Highland Garnet. This lecture will explore the ways in which empire, social inequality and colonialism intersected in early nineteenth-century Ireland to shape the country’s relationship to slavery in the Atlantic world, and to situate Belfast’s complex legacy within these wider influences.
Brian Kelly is an award-winning historian of race and labour in the United States and a Reader in History at Queen’s University Belfast. Formerly director of the After Slavery Project, he has published widely on abolitionism and Atlantic world slave emancipation, on Irish immigration and the ‘race question’, and on racial antagonism and class politics in the 19th and 20th century United States.
Event information
• The Zoom meeting ID for this event is 86107736324– there is no need to register just sign in on the night
• Hosted by Reclaim the Enlightenment– for more information email [email protected]
Date and Time
- -
Location
Clifton House Belfast
Belfast
BT15 1ES
United Kingdom