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Call for Publications

Theme: The Philosophy of Slavery and Emancipation
Publication: Anthology edited by Nathaniel Adam Tobias Coleman and
Simon Roberts-Thomson
Deadline: 22.12.2013

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Historically, the institution of slavery was the focus of a great
deal of philosophical research. Aristotle, Kant, Hegel, Mill,
Wollstonecraft, Bentham, Locke, Rousseau, Paine, Wilberforce,
Grotius, Pufendorf, Nietzsche, Marx, and many others, considered such
topics as the definition of slavery, the rightness or wrongness of
slavery, which sorts of people could or should be enslaved, and
whether (and if so, when) they should be emancipated.

In recent years, by contrast, philosophers have shown little interest
in slavery. This anthology seeks to remedy this by presenting new
work on the philosophy of slavery and emancipation. Possible topics
to be addressed include, but are not restricted to:

- What is slavery? How is slavery different from other forms of
  unfreedom/inequality/labour etc?
- What was mistaken about historical arguments for slavery?
- How do we best explain the wrongness of slavery? Why were the
  actions of slave owners, slave traders, or those involved in the
  initial enslavement, wrong?
- Do people not involved in slavery have obligations to oppose
  slavery?
- Are slaves who once consented to their own enslavement required to
  obey their masters? Do such masters have a right to such obedience?
  Should the state recognise, or even enforce, such contracts of
  slavery?
- What is the relationship between slavery and
  sexism/racism/ableism/heteronormativity etc?
- What is the relationship between slavery and bondage & discipline,
  or dominance & submission, or sadism & masochism?
- What do slave narratives tell us about the nature or wrongness of
  slavery or about the rightness of emancipation?
- What is emancipation?
- What does the history of emancipation tell us about contemporary
  abolitionism?
- Who can emancipate whom, when, and from what?
- Is emancipation all that is owed to slaves? Does the legacy of
  slavery and emancipation require further action?

The anthology will, in the first instance, be submitted to Cambridge
University Press for possible inclusion in their new series, Slavery
Since Emancipation:
http://www.historiansagainstslavery.org/main/book-series/
For this reason, we especially encourage submissions that respond to
the criteria for this series.

Guidelines for submissions

- Deadline for submission of abstract (150-300 words): 22nd December
  2013
- Deadline for submission of paper: 1st February 2014
- Manuscripts should be in English and be between 6000 and 9000
  words, including abstract, references and footnotes.
- Manuscripts should be anonymised and sent by email attachment as a
  word document or pdf to both editors.
- Expected date for preliminary verdict on submitted papers: 31st
  July 2014

We do not intend to make final decisions on the basis of the
abstracts alone. We are asking for abstracts earlier than we are
asking for papers, (a) because we would like to give early feedback
to those who are interested in contributing a paper and (b) because
we would like to begin thinking as soon as possible about the various
ways in which the ideas expressed among the abstracts might be
grouped in an intellectually coherent way.

Editors

Nathaniel Adam Tobias Coleman, ucty...@ucl.ac.uk
Simon Roberts-Thomson, serobertsthom...@gmail.com


Contact:

Nathaniel Adam Tobias Coleman, PhD
Department of Philosophy
University College London
Gower Street
London WC1E 6BT
United Kingdom
Email: ucty...@ucl.ac.uk




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