TY - JOUR AU1 - Peck, Gunther AB - 1. Hannah Moore, “The White Slave Trade” (London, 1805), cited in Selected Writings of Hannah Moore, ed. Robert Hole (Brookfield, VT: Pickering and Chatto, 1996), 36–41; Richard Oastler, A Letter on e the Horrors of White Slavery, taken from the Leeds Mercury of October 16, 1830: Also a Copy of Verses Written Twelve Years ago on the Same Subject (Leeds, 1830), 1; George Henry Evans, Workingman’s Advocate, July 6, e 1844, 2 (hereafter cited as WMA). On abolitionist reworkings of white slavery, see Charles Sumner, White Slavery in the Barbary States: A Lecture before the Boston Mercantile Library Association, February 1, 1847 (Boston, 1847); and Richard Hildreth, ed., The White Slave; or, Memoirs of a Fugitive: A Story of Slave Life in Virginia (London, 1852). Among many Southern polemicists using white slavery, see George Fitzhugh, “The Conservative Principle; or, Social Evils and Their Remedies,” DeBow’s Review 22.5 (1857): 449–60. On British nationalism and white slavery, see Edward Stirling, The White Slave; or, The Flag of Freedom! A Drama in Two Acts (London, 1849). Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas, Volume 1, Issue 2 Copyright © 2004 by Gunther Peck LA BO If the language of white TI - White Slavery and Whiteness: A Transnational View of the Sources of Working-Class Radicalism and Racism JF - Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas DO - 10.1215/15476715-1-2-41 DA - 2004-06-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/duke-university-press/white-slavery-and-whiteness-a-transnational-view-of-the-sources-of-zUFm9WTVJs SP - 41 VL - 1 IS - 2 DP - DeepDyve ER -