Common historical interpretations of the Atlantic slave system often lose the position Africa within the political-economic haze of the era, either producing confused accounts or eliding the question of causality altogether. I argue that this tendency stems from the corrosive effects of the historian’s position as an observer from the present, and that to understand why Africa was the prime location for the source of human slaves, one needs to take a materialist approach to the problem of origins. Only through careful examination of empire, the plantation complex, and the genesis of the Atlantic working classes can one arrive at a proper understanding of the thorny but interrelated issues of race and the beginnings of the African slave trad...
It is possible to suggest that negative narratives about Africa ware coterminous with the occasion o...
Since the dawn of slavery in America, black activists have used Africa to construct a countervailing...
Scholars have shed so much ink trying to document the European propelled Atlantic Slave Trade, but c...
This paper offers an integrated analysis of the forces shaping the emergence of the African slave tr...
This piece has studied the basic facts of black slavery and its consequences on the African contine...
The paper addresses the gap between two conventional Marxist readings of the relation between capita...
A revisit to the episode of Africa’s slave trade and colonialism is clearly two important issues tha...
Of the six continents of the world, the African continent, second largest after Asia has been a scho...
This study attempts to trace the response of the West African Slave Industry to changing economics a...
During the first 150 years of American colonization, Europeans enslaved far more indigenous American...
Africa experienced two major crisis in its history; slave trade and colonialism. At a time of both e...
Traces the development of the Portuguese slave trade. Europeans’ rationalization of their enslavemen...
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented June 1979The almost casual concern of African specia...
The trans-Atlantic slave trade is considered by many to have been a major shock to Africa, one that ...
Slavery is the oldest and most central form of discrimination and while most have knowledge on the T...
It is possible to suggest that negative narratives about Africa ware coterminous with the occasion o...
Since the dawn of slavery in America, black activists have used Africa to construct a countervailing...
Scholars have shed so much ink trying to document the European propelled Atlantic Slave Trade, but c...
This paper offers an integrated analysis of the forces shaping the emergence of the African slave tr...
This piece has studied the basic facts of black slavery and its consequences on the African contine...
The paper addresses the gap between two conventional Marxist readings of the relation between capita...
A revisit to the episode of Africa’s slave trade and colonialism is clearly two important issues tha...
Of the six continents of the world, the African continent, second largest after Asia has been a scho...
This study attempts to trace the response of the West African Slave Industry to changing economics a...
During the first 150 years of American colonization, Europeans enslaved far more indigenous American...
Africa experienced two major crisis in its history; slave trade and colonialism. At a time of both e...
Traces the development of the Portuguese slave trade. Europeans’ rationalization of their enslavemen...
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented June 1979The almost casual concern of African specia...
The trans-Atlantic slave trade is considered by many to have been a major shock to Africa, one that ...
Slavery is the oldest and most central form of discrimination and while most have knowledge on the T...
It is possible to suggest that negative narratives about Africa ware coterminous with the occasion o...
Since the dawn of slavery in America, black activists have used Africa to construct a countervailing...
Scholars have shed so much ink trying to document the European propelled Atlantic Slave Trade, but c...