CFP: Human Trafficking in Early America

Call for Papers

Human Trafficking in Early America

23-25 April 2015

An interdisciplinary conference hosted by the University of Pennsylvania, and co-sponsored by the McNeil Center for Early American Studies, the Department of History at the University of Maryland, College Park, and the Department of History at Drew University.

Co-organizers: Richard Bell (Maryland) and Sharon Braslaw Sundue (Drew)

Keynote Speaker: Edward E. Baptist (Cornell)

The United Nations defines “human trafficking” as the act of “recruiting, transporting, transferring, harboring or receiving a person through a use of force, coercion or other means, for the purpose of exploiting them.”

In early America, human trafficking took many forms, engaging and displacing native, African and European populations in every decade and in every colony and state. Drawing upon a wave of new scholarship on Indian captivity, the middle passage, the domestic slave trade, child abduction and sex trafficking, this conference offers a timely opportunity to examine the cultures and shadow economies created by and elaborated around forced migration in North America and the Atlantic world before 1860.

We invite papers that examine any one of the many varieties of human trafficking in early America. Subjects may include – but are not limited to – motivation and self-justification; violence and trauma; discipline and resistance; complicity and collaboration; law and lawlessness; logistics and marketing; and activism and abolition. We particularly welcome papers that place micro-historical episodes into macro-historical context or that connect theoretical paradigms to lived experience.

Paper proposals should include a brief c.v. and an abstract of no more than 500 words. Preference will be given to fresh, unpublished work that might later find a place in a new volume of essays to be selected and edited by the organizers. Applicants should email their proposals to mceas@ccat.sas.upenn.edu by 15 April 2014. Decisions will be announced by 1 August 2014 and papers must be submitted for pre-circulation byFebruary 1, 2015. Limited support for participants’ travel and lodging will be available.