The Rise of African Slavery in the Americas
Understanding the complex history of slavery and freedom
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:28th Oct '99
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Paperback£30.99(9780521655484)
This book examines the paradox of slavery and freedom in European domains, providing new insights into the English Atlantic slave system and its development.
In The Rise of African Slavery in the Americas, David Eltis delves into the complex relationship between slavery and freedom within European domains. The book poses a critical question: how could countries known for their commitment to individual freedom simultaneously become the architects of the most oppressive slavery system in history? Eltis provides a thoughtful analysis of the English Atlantic slave system's evolution from 1650 to 1800, challenging conventional narratives and offering new insights into the dynamics at play.
Eltis argues that the transatlantic slave trade was not merely a consequence of African vulnerability but rather a manifestation of African resilience and agency. By examining the roles that Africans played in shaping Atlantic societies prior to the nineteenth century, the book highlights the significant contributions and influence of African individuals and communities. This perspective reshapes our understanding of the historical context surrounding slavery, emphasizing the complexities of group identity and the racial foundations that underpinned the institution of slavery during the early modern period.
Through a thorough exploration of this paradox, The Rise of African Slavery in the Americas invites readers to reconsider the narratives surrounding freedom and oppression. Eltis's work is a vital contribution to the discourse on slavery, offering a fresh lens through which to view the intertwined fates of Africans and the emerging Atlantic world.
"Eltis's impressive book does good work in two different arenas. Specialists in research on the Atlantic slave trade in Africa and the Americas will see better then before the integration among markets and regions that characterized this trade. Economists and historians who are not specialists will see this as well, but they will also find the book a proficient and well-sourced overview of a massive subject." EH.NET
"The Rise of African Slavery bears all the hallmarks of the historical craftsmanship we have come to expect from Eltis; a grasp of theoretical and statistical complexity, a mastery of archival materials and a rare ability to impose a tight and disciplined argument on material which, in less talented hands, might overwhelm the author. Here, as elsewhere, Eltis reveals himself to be the finest historian in the field." International Journal of Maritime History
"Eltis's impressive book does good work in two different arenas. Specialists in research on the Atlantic slave trade in Africa and the Americas will see better then before the integration among markets and regions that characterized this trade. Economists and historians who are not specialists will see this as well, but they will also find the book a proficient and well-sourced overview of a massive subject." EH.NET
"Eltis has produced a volume of remarkable empirical depth and insightful interpretation that deserves a wide audience. His enormously important book will no doubt quickly come to be regarded as one of the best examples of what the growing field of Atlantic history has to offer...The author's probing, often provocative conclusions will surely stimulate debate among specialists in a range of subfields concerned with the early modern histories of Europe, Africa, and the Americas." William and Mary Quarterly
"Commented the Gilder Lehrman Center's director, David Brion Davis, professor of history at Yale: ' This work fundamentally reshapes our understanding of the origins and development of African slavery in the New World...Professor Eltis' painstakingly researched and convincingly argued book stands as a major contribution to the field.'" Houston, TX NEWSPAGES
"Eltis has produced a volume of remarkable empirical depth and insightful interpretation that deserves a wide audience. His enormously important book will no doubt quickly come to be regarded as one of the best examples of what the growing field of Atlantic history has to offer...The author's probing, often provocative conclusions will surely stimulate debate among specialists in a range of subfields concerned with the early modern histories of Europe, Africa, and the Americas." William and Mary Quarterly
"As an economic history of the Atlantic slave trade and the plantation complex in the Americas, Dr. Eltis's work contains an impressive amount of factual and quantitative detail." The Americas
"The book shows that African agency was crucially important in determining who entered the slave trade and how it was conducted...Eltis writes clearly and provocatively and never loses sight of the larger framework he is dicussing." The International History Review
"This is a well-crafted, imaginatively constructed, complex account of why slavery in the Americas became exclusively African...This elegantly written account is tantalizing, provocative..." American Historical Review Dec 2001
"...a sophisticated, highly recommended, and unusually stimulating book with an outstanding bibliography...readers will admire the strong appeal to consider the cultural dimensions of economic and political decision-making." The Historian
ISBN: 9780521652315
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
Weight: 720g
372 pages