Saltwater Slavery: A Middle Passage from Africa to American Diaspora |  | Author: Stephanie E. Smallwood Publisher: Harvard University Press Category: Book
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Media: Paperback Pages: 288 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.5 x 0.9
ISBN: 0674030680 Dewey Decimal Number: 973 EAN: 9780674030688
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Product Description
This bold, innovative book promises to radically alter our understanding of the Atlantic slave trade, and the depths of its horrors. Stephanie E. Smallwood offers a penetrating look at the process of enslavement from its African origins through the Middle Passage and into the American slave market. Smallwood's story is animated by deep research and gives us a startlingly graphic experience of the slave trade from the vantage point of the slaves themselves. Ultimately, Saltwater Slavery details how African people were transformed into Atlantic commodities in the process. She begins her narrative on the shores of seventeenth-century Africa, tracing how the trade in human bodies came to define the life of the Gold Coast. Smallwood takes us into the ports and stone fortresses where African captives were held and prepared, and then through the Middle Passage itself. In extraordinary detail, we witness these men and women cramped in the holds of ships, gasping for air, and trying to make sense of an unfamiliar sea and an unimaginable destination. Arriving in America, we see how these new migrants enter the market for laboring bodies, and struggle to reconstruct their social identities in the New World. Throughout, Smallwood examines how the people at the center of her story--merchant capitalists, sailors, and slaves--made sense of the bloody process in which they were joined. The result is both a remarkable transatlantic view of the culture of enslavement, and a painful, intimate vision of the bloody, daily business of the slave trade. (20070115)
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| Customer Reviews: Compelling and Important Work February 22, 2010 Eileen Flanagan (Philadelphia, PA USA) Saltwater Slavery is an award-winning study of how the Atlantic slave trade worked to transform human beings into commodities. Author Stephanie Smallwood takes the records of the Royal African Company and the correspondence between its employees and digs out their unintentional hints as to what enslaved Africans actually experienced during this process. It's not only a first rate piece of historical research, it's well written and compelling, which as a former graduate student I have to say is not always the case with academic books.
I won't try to recount here all the things I learned about the slave trade, but there was one piece that has really stuck with me. Smallwood explains what is known about the spiritual beliefs of people from the Gold Coast and extrapolates the struggles they must have had dealing with death away from their communities and especially at sea, where there is no earth in which to bury people and no kin to carry out the rituals necessary to transport them to the realm of the ancestors. "In essence, a fully realized death could not be accomplished alone. Nor was it something one could attain at sea." This understanding makes it all the more haunting when we read a captain's account of the steady death toll on his ship the James during one Atlantic crossing. Although I knew that at least 20 per cent of Africans died during the Middle Passage, Smallwood's analysis adds another level to that horror: "For the collective of African captives remaining aboard the James, the death of one of their number left them with the burden of a tormented soul, trapped here among them because its migration to join the ancestors had been thwarted." As if being ripped from your homeland and chained together in crowded, disease-ridden conditions without enough food wasn't horrible enough.
So why read something this depressing if you're not an academic in this field? There are lots of reasons, but for one, it's increased my wonder at the human spirit and people's ability to find new forms of meaning, even when every sense of self has been stripped from them. The book ends with "saltwater slaves" trying to establish new communities in the Americas. Smallwood writes here about the particular importance of women in bringing the types of knowledge and experience that help the new arrivals to eventually survive in a new land.
Engaging look at slavery from time of capture through life in America February 16, 2009 Eric Hobart (La Center, WA United States) 11 out of 11 found this review helpful
Stephanie Smallwood has written a book entitled "Saltwater Slavery" that aims, as she says, to provide a linear analysis of the commodification process that transformed Africans into slaves. Her focus is on enslavement in the Gold Coast and trans-Atlantic trade during the 17th and early 18th centuries.
The book is broken into three sections - Capture and enslavement in the Gold Coast, transformation from human to commodity, and the African Diaspora in America. The first section is necessarily short and merely sets the tone for Smallwood's argument - that the enslavement process was a matter of commodifying humans into marketable objects.
The second section, the commodification of these people into objects, is well researched and eminently readable. Smallwood is especially powerful when evoking images of the horrors that individuals underwent during the process.
The third section, the African Diaspora, is also short and to the point, but does not benefit Smallwood's argument as much as the first two sections do.
Overall, this is a good book, but has some minor flaws - first, the Diaspora section is (as previously mentioned) a little weak, and the fact that Smallwood focuses on the Trans-Atlantic Commerce between the Gold Coast and the British Caribbean leaves something to be desired, since both Virginia & South Carolina were important colonies that had slaves during this period, but are largely omitted from the work.
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