English colonial expansion in the Caribbean was more than a matter
of migration and trade. It was also a source of social and cultural
change within England. Finding evidence of cultural exchange
between England and the Caribbean as early as the seventeenth
century, Susan Dwyer Amussen uncovers the learned practice of
slaveholding.
As English colonists in the Caribbean quickly became large-scale
slaveholders, they established new organizations of labor, new uses
of authority, new laws, and new modes of violence, punishment, and
repression in order to manage slaves. Concentrating on Barbados and
Jamaica, England's two most important colonies, Amussen looks at
cultural exports that affected the development of race, gender,
labor, and class as categories of legal and social identity in
England. Concepts of law and punishment in the Caribbean provided a
model for expanded definitions of crime in England; the
organization of sugar factories served as a model for early
industrialization; and the construction of the "white woman" in the
Caribbean contributed to changing notions of "ladyhood" in England.
As Amussen demonstrates, the cultural changes necessary for
settling the Caribbean became an important, though uncounted,
colonial export.