The University of Pennsylvania Press is offering 40% off available titles with code PENN-HOLIDAY25. ๐Ÿ“š

They've got histories of the #DrugTrade (hint: it started earlier than you think), #pearls in the #Mongol Empire, and this ๐Ÿ‘‡ history of how Black #enslavement in the #AtlanticWorld coexisted with powerful #African kingdoms. ๐ŸŒ

https://www.pennpress.org/9780812224627/african-kings-and-black-slaves/

#history #histodons @histodons #bookstodon #BlackHistory #slavery

African Kings and Black Slaves โ€“ Penn Press

A thought-provoking reappraisal of the first European encounters with AfricaAs early as 1441, and well before other European countries encountered Africa, sm...

University of Pennsylvania Press

https://aeon.co/essays/way-down-south-slavery-far-beyond-the-united-states

>>Nowhere in the Americas was slavery a mild institution, and throughout the western hemisphere slavery was foundational to European conquest and settlement. But nor have slavery and race in the Americas been the same everywhere.<<

This essay challenges the US- centricity of all too many Anglphone accounts of slavery in the New World.

#History #Slavery #Americas #AtlanticWorld #Brazil

Way down south: slavery far beyond the United States | Aeon Essays

Slavery in Latin America, on a huge scale, was different from that in the United States. Why donโ€™t we know this history?

Duke University Press sets itself apart in many ways, including its end-of-year sale. Yes, it's a Fall ๐Ÿ Sale!

40% off most books (super new and forthcoming excluded) with code FALL24 through December 13. (Which according to the solar year, is still Fall, I guess.)

Duke University has extensive lists in #LatinAmerican and European Studies (many interesting titles on #French #history and #CulturalStudies, plus #migration).

My choice is Jennifer Morgan's _Reckoning with Slavery: Gender, Kinship, and Capitalism in the Early Black Atlantic_. Winner of the Frederick Douglass Book Prize and the Prize in Women's/Gender History from the Organization of American Historians.

Documenting how #slavery in the #AtlanticWorld required both the recognition and the denial of the human-ness of the enslaved, Morgan shows how #capitalism emerged in this "unholy alliance" of quantifying value with classifying difference.

https://www.dukeupress.edu/reckoning-with-slavery

#histodons #USHistory

Reckoning with Slavery

๐Ÿ™Œ The University of Pennsylvania's sale is available to non US customers as well ๐Ÿ™Œ

40% off through December 31 using the code PENN-HOLIDAY24 (ooh, a variation on the theme).

_The Plantation Machine_ is a comparative #economic, #racial, and political history of two of the most important #sugar islands in the 18th-century #Caribbean (Saint-Domingue (now #Haiti) and #Jamaica). Written by two leading historians of the respective islands, The Plantation Machine reveals the connections between #empire and #capitalism that shaped the #AtlanticWorld in the era before the #AgeOfRevolutions.

https://www.pennpress.org/9780812224238/the-plantation-machine/

#bookstodon

The Plantation Machine โ€“ Penn Press

Jamaica and Saint-Domingue were especially brutal but conspicuously successful eighteenth-century slave societies and imperial colonies. These plantation reg...

University of Pennsylvania Press

"Building on the pioneering work of scholars like Klaus Weber, Eve Rosenhaft, Felix Brahms, and Mischa Honeck, this essay re-charts the various routes of German participation in, profiteering from, as well as showing resistance to transatlantic slavery and its cultural, political, and intellectual reverberations."

Heike Raphael-Hernandez & Pia Wiegmink (2017) German entanglements in transatlantic slavery: An introduction, Atlantic Studies, 14:4, 419-435, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/14788810.2017.1366009 #Journal #Article #DOI #History #Histodon #Histodons #Germany #German #Europe #Colonialism #Slavery #Africa #AtlanticWorld #EarlyModern #Academia #Academic #Academics @histodon @histodons @earlymodern

"The paper proposed aims to analyze the slavery legislation born between the fifteenth and nineteenth centuries, the so-called Black Codes lawsโ€”enacted in all the greatest colonial powers of the Old Continentโ€”which regulated life and transportation of slaves in the colonies. Spain, Portugal, England and France, between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, created legislative codes dedicated to the slaveโ€™s management in the colonies, which regulated all aspects of their life: from religion to marriage, from cohabitation to imprisonment, from crimes to corporal punishment."

Patisso G and Ermete Carbone F (2021) Slavery and Slave Codes in Overseas Empires. Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking. IntechOpen. Available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.91411. #OpenAccess #OA #PeerReview #DOI #Empire #Slavery #Colonization #AtlanticWorld #America #Caribbean #Europe #History #Histodon #Histodons #EarlyModern #Academia #Academic #Academics @histodon @histodons @earlymodern

"At the height of the Thirty Years War, news from South America, West Africa and the Caribbean was widespread and quickly distributed in the central European peripheries of the early modern Atlantic world. Despite the German retreat from sixteenth-century colonial experiments, overseas reports sometimes appeared in remote southern German towns before they were printed in Spain or the Low Countries."

Johannes Mรผller, Globalizing the Thirty Years War: Early German Newspapers and their Geopolitical Perspective on the Atlantic World, German History, Volume 38, Issue 4, December 2020, Pages 550โ€“567, https://doi.org/10.1093/gerhis/ghaa018 #OpenAccess #OA #Journal #Article #DOI #History #Histodon #Histodons #Germany #Europe #Atlantic #AtlanticWorld #C17th #17thCentury #EarlyModern #Academia #Academic #Academics @histodon @histodons @earlymodern

Globalizing the Thirty Years War: Early German Newspapers and their Geopolitical Perspective on the Atlantic World*

Abstract. At the height of the Thirty Years War, news from South America, West Africa and the Caribbean was widespread and quickly distributed in the central Eu

OUP Academic

"This article draws upon archival research and the published materials of former slaves, novelists, slave owners, abolitionists, Atlantic travelers, and police reports to link the systems of slave hunting in Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti, and the US South throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries."

Tyler D Parry, Charlton W Yingling, Slave Hounds and Abolition in the Americas, Past & Present, Volume 246, Issue 1, February 2020, Pages 69โ€“108, https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtz020 #OpenAccess #OA #Journal #Article #DOI #History #Histodon #Histodons #Slavery #Cuba #Jamaica #Haiti #US #USA #UnitedStates #America #C18th #18thCentury #C19th #19thCentury #Atlantic #AtlanticWorld #Dogs #Archives #Academia #Academic #Academia @histodon @histodons

Slave Hounds and Abolition in the Americas*

Abstract. The lash and shackles remain two primary symbols of material degradation fixed in the historical memory of slavery in the Americas. Yet as recounted b

OUP Academic
@slevelt Now that sounds interesting! Will there be a chapter on colonial connections in the #AtlanticWorld? For example in Nieuw Nederland or between the trading companies on the Gold Coast in their forts and factories? If so, I'm really excited to read it. ๐Ÿคฉ
I am new here and hoping to introduce myself to fellow #histodons. I am passionate about #CaptainMarryat #NavalHistory #MaritimeHistory and also men's #DressHistory! A long time #FranklinExpedition and #polar enthusiast, also interested in #MilitaryHistory including the #Warof1812 and the #NapoleonicWars. Another American deeply fascinated by the #RoyalNavy and related topics of #imperialism and the #AtlanticWorld.