The Reckoning: From the Second Slavery to Abolition, 1776-1888
By (Author) Robin Blackburn
Verso Books
Verso Books
4th June 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
History of the Americas
973.7114
Hardback
544
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 39mm
722g
The Reckoning offers the first rounded account of the rise and fall of the Second Slavery - largescale plantation slavery in nineteenth-century Brazil, Cuba and the US South. Robin Blackburn shows how a fusion of industrial capitalism and transatlantic war and revolution turbo-charged racial oppression and the westwards expansion of the United States. Blackburn identifies the new territories, new victims and new battle cries of the Second Slavery. He emphasises the role of financial credit in the spread of plantation agriculture, traces the connections between slavery and the US Civil War, and asks why Brazil threw off Portuguese rule whereas Cuba became one of imperial Spain's final outposts. The Second Slavery faced a fearful reckoning in the 1860s and after when the supposedly invincible Slave Power was defied by extraordinary cross-class, international and interracial alliances. Blackburn narrates the abolitionists' difficult victory over the enslavers, while documenting the racial backlash which brought on Jim Crow and cheated the freedmen and freedwomen of the fruits of their struggle."
Tremendously impressive, the result of a lifetime of learning. Historical writing at its best -- Marcus Rediker, author of The Slave Ship
Robin Blackburn is emeritus professor at the University of Essex. His other books include The Making of New World Slavery: 1492-1800, The American Crucible, The Overthrow of Colonial Slavery: 1776-1848 and an essay on Abraham Lincoln and Karl Marx, An Unfinished Revolution.