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Moral Commerce: ILLUSTRATIONS

Moral Commerce
ILLUSTRATIONS
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Notes

table of contents
  1. List of Illustrations
  2. Acknowledgments
  3. Introduction
  4. 1. Prize Goods: The Quaker Origins of the Slave-Labor Boycott
  5. 2. Blood-Stained Sugar: The Eighteenth-Century British Abstention Campaign
  6. 3. Striking at the Root of Corruption: American Quakers and the Boycott in the Early National Period
  7. 4. I Am a Man, Your Brother: Elizabeth Heyrick, Abstention, and Immediatism
  8. 5. Woman’s Heart: Free Produce and Domesticity
  9. 6. An Abstinence Baptism: American Abolitionism and Free Produce
  10. 7. Yards of Cotton Cloth and Pounds of Sugar: The Transatlantic Free-Produce Movement
  11. 8. Bailing the Atlantic with a Spoon: Free Produce in the 1840s and 1850s
  12. Conclusion
  13. Notes
  14. Index

ILLUSTRATIONS

1. James Gillray, “Anti-Saccharites; or, John Bull and His Family Leaving Off the Use of Sugar,” 1792

2. Isaac Cruikshank, “The Gradual Abolition off [sic] the Slave Trade; or, Leaving of Sugar by Degrees,” 1792

3. James Gillray, “Barbarities in the West Indias,” 1791

4. Cover of Immediate, Not Gradual Abolition, written by Elizabeth Heyrick

5. Antislavery workbag

6. American Free Produce Association label

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