The New Worlds of Thomas Robert Malthus Frontispiece. The new worlds of Thomas Robert Malthus in a map of 1798 pro-duced by his publisher in the year his Essay on the Principle of Population made its de-but. A Chart of the Great Ocean or South Sea . . . (London: J. Johnson, 1798). Courtesy of the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University. The New Worlds of Thomas Robert Malthus rereading the principle of population Alison Bashford and Joyce E. Chaplin p r i n c e t o n u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s p r i n c e t o n a n d o x f o r d Copyright © 2016 by Princeton University Press Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, 6 Oxford Street, Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1TR press.princeton.edu Jacket image: A Chart of the Great Ocean or South Sea Conformably to the Account of the Voyage of Discovery of the French Frigates La Boussole & L’Astrolabe, in the Years 1785, 86, 87, and 88, (London: J. Johnson, 1798). Courtesy of the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University. All Rights Reserved ISBN 978- 0- 691- 16419- 9 Library of Congress Control Number: 2016931919 British Library Cataloging- in- Publication Data is available This book has been composed in Sabon Next Lt Pro Printed on acid- free paper ∞ Printed in the United States of America 1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2 CONTENTS Illustrations vii Tables vii introduction 1 Part I: Population and the New World chapter 1 Population, Empire, and America 17 chapter 2 Writing the Essay 54 Part II: New Worlds in the Essay, c. 1803 chapter 3 New Holland 91 chapter 4 The Americas 116 chapter 5 The South Sea 146 Part III: Malthus and the New World, 1803– 1834 chapter 6 Slavery and Abolition 171 chapter 7 Colonization and Emigration 201 chapter 8 The Essay in New Worlds 237 coda 276 Acknowledgments 285 Abbreviations 287 Notes 289 Bibliography 317 Index 345 ILLUSTRATIONS Frontispiece. The new worlds of Thomas Robert Malthus in a map of 1798 ii 0.1. The second edition of Malthus’s principle of population, “very much enlarged.” 12 1.1. The new world’s cannibal parents 21 1.2. Global parents, Adam and Eve, in new world context 22 1.3. Malthus’s primary new world source, Benjamin Franklin 52 2.1. Analyzing the world, beginning with new worlds 82 3.1. The reproductive family in the fi rst stage of stadial theory 94 3.2. Portrait of Bennelong 108 4.1. Native American women making maple sugar and growing maize 126 5.1. Chart of the island Otaheite by Lieutenant James Cook 153 5.2. Counting population by canoe 154 5.3. The Missionary census, Tahiti, 1797 156 7.1. Map showing the world c. 1829 225 8.1. Fictional Malthusianism 272 Tables 4.1. Texts cited in Malthus, Essay (1803), chapter 4, “America” 120 4.2. Average date of texts cited in Malthus, Essay (1803), chapters 1, 2, 4, (citations referring to the Americas) 121 Introduction For more than two hundred years, people have loved to hate Thomas Rob- ert Malthus, but have they done so with reason and (even if so) for the right reasons? The British moral philosopher and professor of political economy (1766– 1834) is too oft en diminished and dismissed as a mere “parson.” Al- though described as warm and engaging in person— all the more impressive, given his harelip, cleft palate, and speech defect— he has nevertheless been thoroughly vilifi ed. Why? Just as there are characters in books, so there are characters created by books, and Malthus was one of the latter. In his case, he was a character of his own creation. He is famous for one idea, a bleak corre- lation between population growth and starvation, fi rst set out in his Essay on the Principle of Population. In 1798 this was a thesis that seemed to entrench and naturalize rather than ameliorate poverty, just when a new generation of utopians was imagining a brighter and better future. Subsequently, his identifi cation with the hypothetical mismatch between potential popula- tion growth and available resources became so strong that, even within his lifetime, his name came to signify it: “Malthusian” (by 1805) and “Malthu- sianism” (by 1833).1 That stark claim about population has been persistently interpreted with in a European context, even as Malthusianism is today thought of overwhelm- ingly in relation to the developing, extra- European world. This distortion is compounded by the problem that Malthusianism has been analyzed far more than the historical Malthus. When historians have sought to contex- tualize Malthus’s ideas, they have defi ned his “life and times,” as a rule, in the political spaces either within England or between Britain and France. This is both unsurprising and correct, not least because Malthus explained the fi rst iteration of his Essay, published in 1798, as a response both to Wil- liam Godwin and to the marquis de Condorcet, and he explained it in his preface to have been prompted by “conversation with a friend” about the future improvement of humankind. We know that this debate was with Malthus’s radical father, devotee of John Wilkes and friend of Jean- Jacques Rousseau. The father and son envisioned very diff erent futures at a critical historical moment. In the year of their conversation, Great Britain was at war with France— Nelson defeated the French fl eet at the Battle of the Nile that year— and English “Jacobins” and “anti- Jacobins” were also at war. They
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