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The bonds of family
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04 November 2019

'Katie Donington’s fascinating, formidably researched and very important investigation of the manifold ways in which the Hibbert family established its wealth through slave trading and slavery and its outsized role in important aspects of British history, including philanthropy and proslavery, is a book for our times. It deserves a wide readership.'
Family and Community History
'The Bonds of Family is an engaging, methodically-presented study that brings a unique perspective on the British Atlantic and promises to contribute significantly to studies of Caribbean and British history.'
New West Indian Guide
'Through its focus on a single family, The bonds of family thus offers a refreshingly human view of how Britain’s slave economy was made, operated, justified and sustained by its perpetrators. Atlantic slavery, Donington shows, was created not by abstract market forces, but through the actions of individuals such as the Hibberts:
ambitious people who elevated themselves through the ruthless exploitation of enslaved people.'
Continuity and Change
Introduction: Family matters - slavery, commerce, and culture
Part I: Family business - commerce, commodities, and credit
1. Manchester
2. Jamaica
3. London
Part II: Family politics - defending the slave trade and slavery
4. Defending the slave trade
5. Defending slavery
Part III: Family culture - domesticating slavery
6. Intimate relations: the colony and the metropole
7. Consuming passions: Collecting and connoisseurship
8. The culture of refinement: Country houses and philanthropy
Epilogue: Family legacies - after abolition
Select bibliography
Index