The Great Resistance: The 400-Year Fight to End Slavery in the Americas
By (Author) Carrie Gibson
John Murray Press
Basic Books
10th February 2026
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
General and world history
Revolutions, uprisings, rebellions
384
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
The Great Resistance is the story of the struggle for abolition, starting from the earliest runaway slaves in the 1500s to the end of slavery in Brazil in 1888, with a focus on the enslaved people who fought for their own freedom. For too long the story of slave liberation has focused on the role of white allies - important though they were - and the larger imperial publics and governments who changed their minds about the status of the very people they had earlier been happy to enslave.
The story of abolition is neither smooth nor linear, and to understand its jagged and often contradictory course it is necessary to look at a wider historical horizon, one that takes in not only Britain and the United States, but also Spanish America and Brazil. It is also a story intimately intertwined with political revolutions and the rise of the nation-state. There is no explaining the establishment of western democracy without the inclusion of the debates around slavery and abolition. The Great Resistance offers the opportunity to think about freedom from the ground up, from the actions and words of people who were born into or escaped bondage. At a time when all post-slavery societies - not least Britain and the US - are facing serious questions about social and racial inequality, The Great Resistance provides a radical new interpretation of abolition, set against a sweeping historical landscape that takes in the entire hemisphere.Carrie Gibson is a British-American historian and journalist. She received her PhD from Cambridge in 2011, and her thesis focused on the Hispanic Caribbean in the era of the Haitian Revolution. She is the author of the 2014 book Empire's Crossroads: A History of the Caribbean from Columbus to the Present Day. Her second book, El Norte: The Epic and Forgotten Story of Hispanic North America, was published in 2019 and shortlisted for the Mark Lynton History Prize in 2020. Before embarking on a career as a historian, Carrie was a journalist for the Guardian and Observer, and continues to contribute to media outlets. She is currently living in Seoul, South Korea.