Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 13 de sept. de 2012 · Summary. This article seeks to explore from a new angle the massacre associated with the slave ship Zong – that is, the murder of around 130 slaves at sea in 1781. Hitherto, the massacre has been looked at largely in terms of the law, particularly insurance law, and the commercial logic of the British slave trade.

    • Jeremy M Krikler
    • 2012
  2. 1 de jul. de 2013 · Six hundred and sixty-four people suffocated or drowned while the boat sank in the Maroni River, and the crew escaped: the greatest tragedy of its kind in the Atlantic slave trade, according to the...

    • Nina Siegal
  3. Murder in the Slave Trade: Directed by Paul Wendkos. With James Stewart, James Luisi, Warren J. Kemmerling, Dick Gautier. Hawkins defends a star football player who is accused of killing his team's owner, a man who was apparently hated by plenty of other people as well, including his wife.

    • (27)
    • Crime, Drama, Mystery
    • Paul Wendkos
    • 1974-01-22
  4. This article gives due weight to the overriding concerns of commerce in the Zong atrocity, but it also explains it in terms of the culture and context of the selection of captives for the slave trade, a process in which ships' surgeons were prominent.

  5. 28 de jul. de 2021 · On November 19, 1737, the Leusden, a Dutch West India Company slave ship, departed from Elmina, located in modern-day Ghana, carrying about 700 African men, women and children who were to be sold...

    • Mildred Europa Taylor
  6. 13 de sept. de 2012 · A Chain of Murder in the Slave Trade: A Wider Context of the Zong Massacre* J. Krikler. Published in International Review for… 13 September 2012. Sociology. Summary This article seeks to explore from a new angle the massacre associated with the slave ship Zong – that is, the murder of around 130 slaves at sea in 1781.

  7. 1 de dic. de 2012 · A crude and paradoxical medical discourse underwrote the operation of the European trans-Atlantic slave trade that continues to impress upon how we historicize, novelize, and narrativize...