A World Transformed: Slavery in the Americas and the Origins of Global Power by James Walvin

IF 0.3 4区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
P. Manning
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Abstract

Walvin’s concise review of slavery in the Atlantic argues that slavery has transformed the West or, indeed, the world to the present day. Chapters in six sections include overviews of Iberian and northern European slave systems, examples from the Middle Passage, slave trade within Brazil and the United States, “managing slavery,” the campaign for freedom, and the argument about the world transformed by slavery—as seen through sugar, tobacco, servile labor, and plantation economies. Walvin’s purpose for writing the book was to restate the history of slavery in support of the discourse around Black Lives Matter. The book’s most original observations are signaled at the opening of the concluding chapter: “The furore which swept round the globe in the wake of the killing of George Floyd in May 2020 brought slavery back into widespread public debate.” In Walvin’s words, “Critics everywhere were swift to point out that the origins of that injustice lay deep in the history of relations between Black and white ... [and] the history of slavery” (331). As he suggests, public discourse turns to history when the issues become most painful and difficult. Walvin argues that the intensity of the reaction to Floyd’s death was reinforced by an earlier debate. “The 1619 Project,” a series published in New York Times Magazine, appeared in 2019 with the 400th anniversary of the delivery of African captives to Virginia. These essays, which reviewed U.S. history through the lens of slavery, prompted heated discussion among Americans of varied backgrounds, but they made virtually no reference to history outside the United States. Walvin argues, however, that this renewed interest in U.S. slavery ignited a global debate that linked police violence worldwide to reminders of social inequity, to statues of imperial generals, and to the wealth garnered by powerful families and institutions from the work of forced laborers. Having argued that statements about the past of slavery and inequality need to be updated, Walvin turns to the historical background underlying the explosion of Black Lives Matter. He begins with World War II, in which people from all over the world fought the Axis powers, after which the inhabitants of colonies were able to claim the rights of national citizens. He acknowledges that the U.S. civil-rights movement of that era performed a similar function: “In the USA, the reconstruction of the Black past lifted slavery out of its essentially regional setting.”
詹姆斯·沃尔文的《改变的世界:美洲的奴隶制与全球力量的起源》
沃尔文对大西洋奴隶制的简要回顾认为,奴隶制已经改变了西方,甚至改变了当今世界。六节中的章节包括伊比利亚和北欧奴隶制度的概述,中间通道的例子,巴西和美国境内的奴隶贸易,“管理奴隶制”,争取自由的运动,以及关于奴隶制改变了世界的争论——从糖、烟草、奴役劳动和种植园经济来看。沃尔文写这本书的目的是重述奴隶制的历史,以支持围绕“黑人的命也是命”的讨论。这本书最具原创性的观点在结尾一章的开头就得到了体现:“2020年5月乔治·弗洛伊德被杀后,席卷全球的愤怒将奴隶制重新带入了广泛的公众辩论。”用沃尔文的话说,“世界各地的批评者迅速指出,这种不公正的根源深深植根于黑人和白人之间的关系史……[和]奴隶制史”(331)。正如他所建议的,当问题变得最痛苦和困难时,公共话语就会转向历史。沃尔文认为,早些时候的一场辩论强化了人们对弗洛伊德之死的强烈反应。发表在《纽约时报》杂志上的系列文章《1619计划》于2019年出现在向弗吉尼亚州运送非洲俘虏400周年之际。这些文章从奴隶制的角度回顾了美国历史,引起了不同背景的美国人的热烈讨论,但它们几乎没有提及美国以外的历史。然而,沃尔文认为,这种对美国奴隶制的新兴趣引发了一场全球辩论,将世界各地的警察暴力与社会不平等的提醒、帝国将军的雕像以及强大的家庭和机构从强迫劳工的工作中获得的财富联系起来。沃尔文认为,关于奴隶制和不平等的过去的说法需要更新,他转向了《黑人的命也是命》爆炸的历史背景。他从第二次世界大战开始,在这场战争中,来自世界各地的人们与轴心国作战,之后殖民地的居民能够要求国家公民的权利。他承认,那个时代的美国民权运动也发挥了类似的作用:“在美国,黑人过去的重建将奴隶制从其基本上的地区背景中解放出来。”
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
20.00%
发文量
68
期刊介绍: The Journal of Interdisciplinary History features substantive articles, research notes, review essays, and book reviews relating historical research and work in applied fields-such as economics and demographics. Spanning all geographical areas and periods of history, topics include: - social history - demographic history - psychohistory - political history - family history - economic history - cultural history - technological history
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