Population Projections

Demographic Fearmongering and “Uterine Colonization” during the Age of Gradual Emancipation

Authors

  • Meagan Wierda Université de Montréal

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55283/jhk.19138

Keywords:

Slavery, Race, American Colonization Society, Gender, Demography, Population

Abstract

Centered primarily on the American Colonization Society (ACS), this article explores the movement to colonize free Black women and men in West Africa as a political—as well as a knowledge—project rooted in demography. Hostile to slavery and immediate emancipation alike, white colonizationists used quantitative rhetoric to transform African Americans along a vast spectrum of unfreedom into a “dangerous” and multiplying population in need of removal. While this demographic fearmongering proved effective, the ACS struggled to make largescale expatriation appear equally so. To render removal “practicable,” then, colonizationists harnessed the fertility of African American women. By specifically targeting those in their procreative prime for expatriation, colonizationists believed they could gradually deplete the country’s Black population. The colonization project as envisioned by the American Colonization Society, then, was the clear inheritor of demography’s hierarchizing tendencies. Not only did colonizationists reproduce the epistemic violence of a system that fragmented and instrumentalized the bodies of Black women, but in specifically targeting the latter for expatriation, they produced a new category via which to define African Americans as a threatening and unassimilable population.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

  • Meagan Wierda, Université de Montréal

    Meagan Wierda is an assistant professor of history at the Université de Montréal. She writes about who gets to count within the antebellum United States.

Downloads

Published

2025-09-19

Issue

Section

Special Issue