Two impressive studies have reexamined Eric Williams' conclusion that Britain's abolition of the slave trade in 1807 and its emancipation of slaves in its colonies in 1834 were driven primarily by economic rather than humanitarian motives. ββββββββ ββ ββββββββ βββββ βββββββββββββ βββ βββ ββββββββββββ ββ βββββββ ββββββ βββββ βββββββββ βββββββββ ββ βββββββββ βββ ββ ββββ ββββββ ββ ββββββββββ ββ βββββββ ββββββββ βββββββββ
Two Challenges to Williams' Conclusion Β·That British abolitionist movement was primarily driven by economics.
Williams argues that the slave colonies were becoming a drag on the British economy. That's why Britain abolished slavery, not because they thought it was wrong. But two studies question that conclusion.
2. Eltis' conclusion Β·Williams was partly right, partly wrong
It is economics that drove abolition; just not what Williams thought. The slave colonies' economies were fine. But slave labor wasn't good for the broader economy of the British empire.
Passage Style
Critique or Debate
23.
Which one of the following ββββ ββββββ βββββββββ ββββ ββ βββ βββββββ ββββββ βββ βββββββββ βββββββββ ββ βββ βββββ βββββ βββ βββ ββββββββββββ ββ ββββββ ββ βββ βββββββββ
Question Type
Stated
We want the statement that best captures Williamsβ explanation for the abolition of slavery. His explanation is given in P1: he thinks slavery was abolished because slave colonies were becoming a drag on the economy. We should look for an answer choice that conveys this hypothesis.
Both capitalists and βββββββ ββ βββββββ ββββββββ βββ βββββ ββββββββ ββ ββββββββββββββ
Williams doesnβt think this. To the contraryβhe thinks abolition was driven primarily by economic reasons, not moral ones. In fact, no one in the passage suggests (B) as an explanation for why slavery was abolished.
Misdirection. Part of Eltisβ hypothesis (not Williamsβ) is that voluntary labor did a better job than slave labor at satisfying British consumers. But neither Eltis nor Williams suggests that slave labor couldnβt satisfy consumers. Williamsβ hypothesis is simply that slave labor was becoming a drag on the economy.
d
The operation of ββββββββ βββββ ββ ββββββ βββββ βββ ββ ββββββ ββββββββββββ βββββββββββββ
Williamsβ explanation is given in P1: he thinks slavery was abolished because slave colonies were becoming a drag on the economy. (D) conveys that hypothesis well.
e
British workers became βββββββββ ββββ ββββββ βββββ ββ βββ ββββββββ βββββββββ ββββ βββββββ ββββ βββββββββ ββββββ ββββββ
Williams doesnβt think this. His explanation for why slavery was abolished doesnβt involve British workers or their wages. He simply thinks that slave colonies were becoming a drag on the British economy overall. In fact, no one in the passage suggests (E) as an explanation for why slavery was abolished.
Difficulty
88% of people who answer get this correct
This is a moderately difficult question.
It is significantly easier than other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%136
146
75%156
Analysis
Stated
Critique or Debate
Humanities
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
2%
160
b
3%
159
c
6%
159
d
88%
165
e
1%
161
Question history
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