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Chapter 5 - Maroon Settlements as Abolitionist Commons

Nanny of the Maroons, R. C. Dallas’s History of the Maroons, and J. G. Stedman’s Narrative of a Five Years’ Expedition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2025

Katey Castellano
Affiliation:
James Madison University, Virginia
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Summary

This chapter moves backward in time to trace the Maroons’ decolonial relationship with the environment, starting with Queen Nanny, a leader in the First Maroon War and a present-day National Hero of Jamaica. Narratives of Nanny’s warfare against the British noted that her fight included growing pumpkins in the rugged Blue Mountains. The chapter then turns to a critically neglected Romantic-era text, R. C. Dallas’s History of the Maroons. Although primarily a military history, Dallas repeatedly admired the Maroons’ communal “superabundance.” Similarly, J. G. Stedman’s Narrative of a Five Years’ Expedition, accompanied by William Blake’s illustrations, described Maroon settlements as viable, sustainable societies that were notable alternatives to plantation capitalism. The Maroons’ agricultural and culinary “superabundance,” documented by Dallas, Stedman, and Blake alike, suggests a Romantic-era ecological critique rooted in communal decolonial practices, which supplements the Romantic figure of the solitary walker who critiques society by communing with nature.

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Robert Wedderburn, Abolition, and the Commons
Romanticism's Black Geographies
, pp. 101 - 122
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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