Douglas Hall (3) (1920–1999)
Teoksen In Miserable Slavery: Thomas Thistlewood in Jamaica 1750-1786 tekijä
Katso täsmennyssivulta muut tekijät, joiden nimi on Douglas Hall.
Tekijän teokset
Merkitty avainsanalla
Yleistieto
- Virallinen nimi
- Hall, Douglas G. H.
- Syntymäaika
- 1920-12-20
- Kuolinaika
- 1999-11-24
- Sukupuoli
- male
- Kansalaisuus
- Jamaica
- Syntymäpaikka
- Kingston, Jamaica
- Kuolinpaikka
- Westmoreland, Jamaica
- Koulutus
- Jamaica College
University of Toronto (MSc|Economics)
London School of Economics (Ph.D|History) - Ammatit
- Lecturer (Economic History ∙ University College of the West Indies ∙ History ∙ University College of the West Indies)
Chair of History (University of West Indies, Mona) - Organisaatiot
- University of West Indies, Mona
- Palkinnot ja kunnianosoitukset
- Institute of Jamaica's Musgrave Medal
Norman Manley Award for Excellence (Oct 1999) - Lyhyt elämäkerta
- Douglas Hall (1920-1999)
Douglas Hall was born in Kingston, Jamaica, in December 1920 and attended Jamaica College where he was influenced by Reginald Murray, Hugo Chambers, and the historian E. H. J. King.
In College, he was a keen sportsman and won a gold medal award in school athletics before left to enter the University of Toronto in 1941. Like many, war service interrupted his studies when he joined the 48th Highlanders and saw active military service in Italy.
Resuming his studies after demobilisation in 1946, Douglas completed his Master of Science in Economics at Toronto. From there he went to England to the London School of Economics where he completed his Doctorate of Philosophy in History under the guidance of Professor F. J. Fisher. His thesis was published as "Free Jamaica, 1838-1865: An Economic History" by the Yale University Press in 1959.
Douglas joined the staff of the then University College of the West Indies (later called University of West Indies, Mona) in 1954 as Extra-Mural Tutor for the Leeward Islands. In 1957 he returned to Jamaica as Resident Tutor, taught economic history in the Department of Economics between 1959 and 1961 and in the later year he joined the Department of History as Lecturer.
By the time he was aged 43 he was appointed Professor of History and Head of the Department until he retired in 1981.
Through his scholarly work, Douglas provided a distinctly Caribbean voice in the writing of Caribbean economic history, a field traditionally dominated by British and American historians.
Another of his pioneering works was "Five of the Leewards, 1834-1870" (1971) remain the primary reference texts for the study of the economic history of the post-slavery period.
Equally important are his many ground-breaking articles, which include his collaborative and interdisciplinary work with the American anthropologist, Sidney Mintz: "The Origins of the Jamaican Internal Marketing System" (1960); his "Absentee-Proprietorship in the British West Indies to about 1850" (1964); "Incalculability as a Feature of Sugar Production during the Eighteenth Century" (1961); "Slaves and Slavery in the British West Indies" (1962); "The Flight from the Estates Reconsidered: The British West Indies, 1838-42" (1978); and his unique 1987 Elsa Goveia Memorial Lecture,"Planters, Farmers and Gardeners in Eighteenth Century Jamaica".
His "In Miserable Slavery: Thomas Thistlewood in Jamaica 1750-1786" (1989), a compilation of and commentary on the diaries kept by the overseer/penkeeper, is essential reading for those who seek an understanding of the daily lives of slaves and their masters on West Indian slave properties.
Since its inception in 1997, Douglas had been Series Editor of the UWI Press Biography Series - his biography of M. G. Smith "A Man Divided"; "Law, Justice and Empire: The Colonial Career of John Gorrie 1829-1892" by Bridget Brereton; "White Rebel: The Life and Times of T. T. Lewis" by Gary Lewis and "Bechu: 'Bound Coolie' Radical in British Guira 1894-1901" by Clem Seecharan.
Douglas Hall was living in the Darliston, Jamaica when he died Tuesday 24th November 1999, in Westmoreland at the age of 79 his burial was on Monday, 6th December 1999 at 3:00 p.m. at the University Chapel, Mona Campus. He was survived by widow, Pat, his daughters Valerie, Denise, Thealia, Lisa and his sons David and Peter.
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Ulrich explores Martha Ballard’s world beyond her diary. Ulrich uses each chapter to illuminate specific areas of world that Martha lived in. Hall’s chapters simply follow the stages of Thislewood’s life and career. The world outside Jamaica is only mentioned when war threatens the island. Hall is less than forthcoming about just how the island is threatened. I knew from previous research that the slaves were steeling food because the island was suffering under a wartime embargo. Hall only briefly mentions this and does not even acknowledge it as a factor in the large profits Thistlewood made from his garden some years.
Thistlewood was a great reader and Hall does mention titles of books that Thistlewood imported from England or borrowed from his neighbors. I was able to keep track of events off the island through these touchstones.
In spite of how it may sound from what I have just said I did find the book fascinating. I learned things about slavery, as practiced in British colonies, that I never imagined. It was both much worse than I ever imagined and, at times, less severe than I would have thought. Thistlewood did not defend his actions; he simply recorded what he did. Through Halls book we get a glimpse of what it was like when people kept other people as property. It was nothing like “Gone With the Wind”.… (lisätietoja)