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The Many‐Headed Hydra: Sailors, Slaves, and the Atlantic Working Class in the Eighteenth Century
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1990
Year
Critical Race TheoryColonialismDecolonialityHistorical SociologyBritish LiteratureAfrican American StudiesCultural HistoryWorking ConditionsLanguage StudiesHistorical EvidenceGordon RiotsIntellectual HistoryTransnational HistoryClass ConflictSocial ClassLondon Port StrikeHistorical AnalysisAtlantic Working ClassHistorical MethodologyMany‐headed HydraAfrican American SlaveryBusinessEighteenth CenturyModernity
Abstract This article uses the myth of the many‐headed Hydra, commonly employed by members of various ruling classes around the Atlantic to describe the class struggles that surrounded them, to illuminate the history of the working class in the eighteenth century. It concentrates on two groups of workers, wage laborers (especially sailors) and slaves, two zones of the Atlantic, Europe and North America, and four moments in the history of the Atlantic working class: 1747, when, in the Knowles Riot in Boston, sailors and slaves fought the King's press gangs and in so doing created one of the central ideas of the ‘Age of Revolution’ 1768, when, in the London port strike, sailors, Irish coal heavers, and others pioneered one of the central ideas and activities of the modern working‐class movement, the strike; 1776, when, in the American Revolution, sailors and slaves helped to instigate and win the world's first colonial war for liberation; and 1780, when, in the Gordon Riots, the polyglot working class of London liberated the prisons amid the greatest municipal insurrection of the eighteenth century. It argues that fixed, static notions of race, ethnicity, and nationality among historians have obscured a vital world of cooperation and accomplishment within a multi‐racial, multi‐ethnic, international working class.