Abstract: Though the trade in enslaved persons was abolished throughout the British empire in 1807, slavery remained the primary labor source in the Cape Colony until final emancipation in December 1838. Both before and after emancipation, desertion featured as one of the primary forms of everyday resistance available to coerced workers, including the scores of children that appeared in runaway advertisements in colonial newspapers. Using two of the Cape's largest advertising platforms, the De Zuid Afrikaan and the Cape of Good Hope Government Gazette , this paper highlights the demographic make-up of child runaways and the strategies of subterfuge they used to operate within the frameworks of colonial society.
Karl Bergemann (Tue,) studied this question.
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