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Overview"The period of the ""second slavery"" was marked by geographic expansion of zones of slavery into the Upper US South, Cuba, and Brazil and chronological expansion into the industrial age.As The Reinvention of Atlantic Slavery shows, ambitious planters throughout the Greater Caribbean hired a transnational group of chemists, engineers, and other ""plantation experts"" to assist them in adapting industrial technologies to suit their ""tropical"" needs and increase profitability. Not only were technologies reinvented so as to keep manufacturing processes local but slaveholders' adaptation of new racial ideologies also shaped their particular usage of new machines. Finally, these businessmen forged a new set of relationships with one another in order to sidestep the financial dominance of Great Britain and the northeastern United States. In addition to promoting new forms of mechanization, the technical experts depended on the know-how of slaves alongside whom they worked. Bondspeople with industrial craft skills played key roles in the development of new production processes and technologies like sugar mills. While the very existence of such skilled slaves contradicted prevailing racial ideologies and allowed black people to wield power in their own interest, their contributions grew the slave economies of Cuba, Brazil, and the Upper South. Together reform-minded planters, technical experts, and enslaved people modernized sugar plantations in Louisiana and Cuba; brought together rural Virginia wheat planters and industrial flour-millers in Richmond with the coffee-planting system of southeastern Brazil; and enabled engineers and iron-makers in Virginia to collaborate with railroad and sugar entrepreneurs in Cuba.Through his examination of the creation of these industrial bodies of knowledge, Daniel B. Rood demonstrates the deepening dependence of the Atlantic economy on forced labor after a few revolutionary decades in which it seemed the institution of slavery might be destroyed. The reinvention of this plantation world in the 1840s and 1850s brought a renewed movement in the 1860s, especially from enslaved people themselves in the United States and Cuba, to end chattel slavery.This account of capitalism, technology, and slavery offers new perspectives on the nineteenth-century Americas." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Daniel B. Rood (Associate Professor of History, Associate Professor of History, University of Georgia)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.10cm Weight: 0.431kg ISBN: 9780197528426ISBN 10: 0197528422 Pages: 290 Publication Date: 22 June 2020 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviews"""Rood's work reorients scholarly perspectives on the transformation of Atlantic economies in the mid-nineteenth century and the centrality of slavery in this transformation. His rare combination of deep attention to the management decisions of slaveholders and merchants and the labor of enslaved people is laudable and draws together disparate veins of historical research and argument. This book will be of great interest to scholars of slavery and capitalism, economic history, and the history of science and technology."" -- Michael Becker, H-Caribbean, H NET Reviews ""Recommended.""--CHOICE ""This highly informative book illuminates the impact of technology, competition, and resistance on the major slave economies of the nineteenth-century Americas--those of the United States, Cuba, and Brazil. Daniel Rood vividly conveys how slavery was interwoven with sugar making, wheat growing, flour kneading, cotton baling, railroad construction, maritime navigation, and other laborious and complex processes. He explains how 'racial capitalism' conscripted a captive labor force of African descent, and how the slaveholders exploited the ingenuity and knowledge of their slaves. Industrial methods intensified this slaveholder capitalismâ. Rood conjures up the true commodity hell of the plantation world, showing that bondage could be, and was, abetted by technical advance and competitive pressures."" -- Robin Blackburn , Journal of the Civil War Era ""Among the many monographs published over the last decade on the topic of...'slaveholders' capitalism,' The Reinvention ofAtlantic Slavery...ranks among the most accomplished and significant....Numerous scholars have emphasized that plantation-basedsugar cultivation was a 'modern"" industrial enterprise.' Rood has developed this insight with a new level of care. This book must be read by anyone with even a passing interest in its subject."" -- Jonathan Levy, Journal of Southern History ""The Reinvention of Atlantic Slavery introduces agricultural history into discussions regarding the vitality of capitalism within transnational slavery during the nineteenth century. Throughout this book, Daniel B. Rood offers a reading of how racialized bodies linked with specific technological skills as dynamic plantation systems altered to accommodate capitalist and industrial changes to slave systems....Rood's significant monograph offers inductive analysis of technological creolization of transnational second slavery from below and provides a broad deductive contribution that links planter concerns with the inversion of white agricultural goods and the decay of the slave system.""--Andrew Kettler, Journal of American History ""In the wake of the Industrial Revolution, slavery expanded and intensified. Drawing on the age's most advanced technologies, planters in places such as Virginia, Brazil, and Cuba forced their enslaved workers to grow unprecedented quantities of wheat, coffee, and sugar, maintaining the central role of slave grown agricultural commodities in the global economy. Rood's impressive charting of this last flourishing of slavery's capitalism reorients our thinking about slavery and the advent of capitalist modernity.""--Sven Beckert, author of Empire of Cotton: A Global History ""This hemispheric account of slavery's infrastructure ingeniously connects volatile sucrose molecules, iron railroad spikes, and wooden flour barrels to the largest questions in the history of capitalism. Rood succeeds beyond any other scholar in bringing the material world into the story of racial modernity in the Americas. Integrating disparate fields of research and crossing the geographical boundaries of standard historical accounts, Rood has written a truly distinctive book.""--Seth Rockman, Brown University ""This is an excellent history of the links between the plantation societies of Cuba, Brazil, and the United States during the nineteenth century, focused on the impact of new industrial machinery, the role of the 'experts', and the division of labor along racial demarcations. Daniel Rood challenges established notions on the process of technical innovation and its adaptation in the tropics, showing how the beginning of mass consumption was shaped by Atlantic powers and local elites. This book will be required reading for scholars exploring the relationship between modernity, enslaved labor, and the industrial revolution in the Americas.""--Reinaldo Funes-Monzote, author of From Rainforest to Cane Field in Cuba since 1492 ""Elegant and often insightful...Tacitly marking the passing of an Atlantic economy in which time and space were fundamentally shaped by nature, Rood shows how nature's constraints...were combated, tamed, and in many cases thwarted altogether by decisions made in the name of greater efficiency, control, and specificity. Those efforts streamed through technological developments....These developments, and the pursuit of profit that stood behind them, reified the Greater Caribbean. Yes, goods flowed around this system, but so too did knowledge, expertise, assumptions, and goals. Rood makes a powerful case for a cohesive and coherent whole where others might have emphasized segmentation....The contribution made here is significant, and striking.""--James Alexander Dun, American Historical Review ""Daniel B. Rood's fascinating book...examines the interlocking systems of technological innovation and market consolidation that produced a resurgence of slavery from the 1830s to the 1860s...His book tells this complex story with a focus on the changing modes of production, refinement, and transportation of commodities ranging from sugar to iron, coffee, and flour....Buttressed by legal case histories and oral traditions, Rood offers up facts, rather than polemic. I suspect that this neutrality will make his thesis about the vectors of modern capital all the more durable.""--Carolyn Vellenga Berman, Victorian Studies ""Daniel Rood's The Reinvention of Atlantic Slavery clearly situates itself in the emerging cannon of the New History of Capitalism on plantation slavery, while coming down clearly on the side of those who argue that the master-slave relation was no obstacle to the introduction of labor-saving technology during the 'second slavery' of the nineteenth century....Rood's book bring important new insights to the history of the 'second slavery' by broadening its scope beyond the US cotton-Cuban sugar-British textile industry node, to include the 'Great Caribbean' nexus of Cuban sugar-upper South technical expertise, iron and wheat-Brazilian coffee. His accounts of the transformation of the port of Havana, and of wheat cultivation and processing in Virginia are important additions to our historical knowledge.""--Charles Post, Almanack ""Rood's brilliant book considers how elite slaveholders across the hemisphere deployed cutting-edge machine technology, storage and transportation infrastructure, and techniques of racial management to consolidate wealth and power in a system threatened by resistance, abolitionism, and the growing hegemony of European and Yankee regimes.""-Alice Maggard, Journal of the Early Republic" Rood's work reorients scholarly perspectives on the transformation of Atlantic economies in the mid-nineteenth century and the centrality of slavery in this transformation. His rare combination of deep attention to the management decisions of slaveholders and merchants and the labor of enslaved people is laudable and draws together disparate veins of historical research and argument. This book will be of great interest to scholars of slavery and capitalism, economic history, and the history of science and technology. -- Michael Becker, H-Caribbean, H NET Reviews Recommended. --CHOICE This highly informative book illuminates the impact of technology, competition, and resistance on the major slave economies of the nineteenth-century Americas--those of the United States, Cuba, and Brazil. Daniel Rood vividly conveys how slavery was interwoven with sugar making, wheat growing, flour kneading, cotton baling, railroad construction, maritime navigation, and other laborious and complex processes. He explains how 'racial capitalism' conscripted a captive labor force of African descent, and how the slaveholders exploited the ingenuity and knowledge of their slaves. Industrial methods intensified this slaveholder capitalisma. Rood conjures up the true commodity hell of the plantation world, showing that bondage could be, and was, abetted by technical advance and competitive pressures. -- Robin Blackburn , Journal of the Civil War Era Among the many monographs published over the last decade on the topic of...'slaveholders' capitalism,' The Reinvention ofAtlantic Slavery...ranks among the most accomplished and significant....Numerous scholars have emphasized that plantation-basedsugar cultivation was a 'modern industrial enterprise.' Rood has developed this insight with a new level of care. This book must be read by anyone with even a passing interest in its subject. -- Jonathan Levy, Journal of Southern History The Reinvention of Atlantic Slavery introduces agricultural history into discussions regarding the vitality of capitalism within transnational slavery during the nineteenth century. Throughout this book, Daniel B. Rood offers a reading of how racialized bodies linked with specific technological skills as dynamic plantation systems altered to accommodate capitalist and industrial changes to slave systems....Rood's significant monograph offers inductive analysis of technological creolization of transnational second slavery from below and provides a broad deductive contribution that links planter concerns with the inversion of white agricultural goods and the decay of the slave system. --Andrew Kettler, Journal of American History In the wake of the Industrial Revolution, slavery expanded and intensified. Drawing on the age's most advanced technologies, planters in places such as Virginia, Brazil, and Cuba forced their enslaved workers to grow unprecedented quantities of wheat, coffee, and sugar, maintaining the central role of slave grown agricultural commodities in the global economy. Rood's impressive charting of this last flourishing of slavery's capitalism reorients our thinking about slavery and the advent of capitalist modernity. --Sven Beckert, author of Empire of Cotton: A Global History This hemispheric account of slavery's infrastructure ingeniously connects volatile sucrose molecules, iron railroad spikes, and wooden flour barrels to the largest questions in the history of capitalism. Rood succeeds beyond any other scholar in bringing the material world into the story of racial modernity in the Americas. Integrating disparate fields of research and crossing the geographical boundaries of standard historical accounts, Rood has written a truly distinctive book. --Seth Rockman, Brown University This is an excellent history of the links between the plantation societies of Cuba, Brazil, and the United States during the nineteenth century, focused on the impact of new industrial machinery, the role of the 'experts', and the division of labor along racial demarcations. Daniel Rood challenges established notions on the process of technical innovation and its adaptation in the tropics, showing how the beginning of mass consumption was shaped by Atlantic powers and local elites. This book will be required reading for scholars exploring the relationship between modernity, enslaved labor, and the industrial revolution in the Americas. --Reinaldo Funes-Monzote, author of From Rainforest to Cane Field in Cuba since 1492 Elegant and often insightful...Tacitly marking the passing of an Atlantic economy in which time and space were fundamentally shaped by nature, Rood shows how nature's constraints...were combated, tamed, and in many cases thwarted altogether by decisions made in the name of greater efficiency, control, and specificity. Those efforts streamed through technological developments....These developments, and the pursuit of profit that stood behind them, reified the Greater Caribbean. Yes, goods flowed around this system, but so too did knowledge, expertise, assumptions, and goals. Rood makes a powerful case for a cohesive and coherent whole where others might have emphasized segmentation....The contribution made here is significant, and striking. --James Alexander Dun, American Historical Review Daniel B. Rood's fascinating book...examines the interlocking systems of technological innovation and market consolidation that produced a resurgence of slavery from the 1830s to the 1860s...His book tells this complex story with a focus on the changing modes of production, refinement, and transportation of commodities ranging from sugar to iron, coffee, and flour....Buttressed by legal case histories and oral traditions, Rood offers up facts, rather than polemic. I suspect that this neutrality will make his thesis about the vectors of modern capital all the more durable. --Carolyn Vellenga Berman, Victorian Studies Daniel Rood's The Reinvention of Atlantic Slavery clearly situates itself in the emerging cannon of the New History of Capitalism on plantation slavery, while coming down clearly on the side of those who argue that the master-slave relation was no obstacle to the introduction of labor-saving technology during the 'second slavery' of the nineteenth century....Rood's book bring important new insights to the history of the 'second slavery' by broadening its scope beyond the US cotton-Cuban sugar-British textile industry node, to include the 'Great Caribbean' nexus of Cuban sugar-upper South technical expertise, iron and wheat-Brazilian coffee. His accounts of the transformation of the port of Havana, and of wheat cultivation and processing in Virginia are important additions to our historical knowledge. --Charles Post, Almanack Rood's brilliant book considers how elite slaveholders across the hemisphere deployed cutting-edge machine technology, storage and transportation infrastructure, and techniques of racial management to consolidate wealth and power in a system threatened by resistance, abolitionism, and the growing hegemony of European and Yankee regimes. -Alice Maggard, Journal of the Early Republic Rood's brilliant book considers how elite slaveholders across the hemisphere deployed cutting-edge machine technology, storage and transportation infrastructure, and techniques of racial management to consolidate wealth and power in a system threatened by resistance, abolitionism, and the growing hegemony of European and Yankee regimes. -Alice Maggard, Journal of the Early Republic Daniel Rood's The Reinvention of Atlantic Slavery clearly situates itself in the emerging cannon of the New History of Capitalism on plantation slavery, while coming down clearly on the side of those who argue that the master-slave relation was no obstacle to the introduction of labor-saving technology during the 'second slavery' of the nineteenth century....Rood's book bring important new insights to the history of the 'second slavery' by broadening its scope beyond the US cotton-Cuban sugar-British textile industry node, to include the 'Great Caribbean' nexus of Cuban sugar-upper South technical expertise, iron and wheat-Brazilian coffee. His accounts of the transformation of the port of Havana, and of wheat cultivation and processing in Virginia are important additions to our historical knowledge. * Charles Post, Almanack * Daniel B. Rood's fascinating book...examines the interlocking systems of technological innovation and market consolidation that produced a resurgence of slavery from the 1830s to the 1860s...His book tells this complex story with a focus on the changing modes of production, refinement, and transportation of commodities ranging from sugar to iron, coffee, and flour....Buttressed by legal case histories and oral traditions, Rood offers up facts, rather than polemic. I suspect that this neutrality will make his thesis about the vectors of modern capital all the more durable. * Carolyn Vellenga Berman, Victorian Studies * Elegant and often insightful...Tacitly marking the passing of an Atlantic economy in which time and space were fundamentally shaped by nature, Rood shows how nature's constraints...were combated, tamed, and in many cases thwarted altogether by decisions made in the name of greater efficiency, control, and specificity. Those efforts streamed through technological developments....These developments, and the pursuit of profit that stood behind them, reified the Greater Caribbean. Yes, goods flowed around this system, but so too did knowledge, expertise, assumptions, and goals. Rood makes a powerful case for a cohesive and coherent whole where others might have emphasized segmentation....The contribution made here is significant, and striking. * James Alexander Dun, American Historical Review * This is an excellent history of the links between the plantation societies of Cuba, Brazil, and the United States during the nineteenth century, focused on the impact of new industrial machinery, the role of the 'experts', and the division of labor along racial demarcations. Daniel Rood challenges established notions on the process of technical innovation and its adaptation in the tropics, showing how the beginning of mass consumption was shaped by Atlantic powers and local elites. This book will be required reading for scholars exploring the relationship between modernity, enslaved labor, and the industrial revolution in the Americas. * Reinaldo Funes-Monzote, author of From Rainforest to Cane Field in Cuba since 1492 * This hemispheric account of slavery's infrastructure ingeniously connects volatile sucrose molecules, iron railroad spikes, and wooden flour barrels to the largest questions in the history of capitalism. Rood succeeds beyond any other scholar in bringing the material world into the story of racial modernity in the Americas. Integrating disparate fields of research and crossing the geographical boundaries of standard historical accounts, Rood has written a truly distinctive book. * Seth Rockman, Brown University * In the wake of the Industrial Revolution, slavery expanded and intensified. Drawing on the age's most advanced technologies, planters in places such as Virginia, Brazil, and Cuba forced their enslaved workers to grow unprecedented quantities of wheat, coffee, and sugar, maintaining the central role of slave grown agricultural commodities in the global economy. Rood's impressive charting of this last flourishing of slavery's capitalism reorients our thinking about slavery and the advent of capitalist modernity. * Sven Beckert, author of Empire of Cotton: A Global History * The Reinvention of Atlantic Slavery introduces agricultural history into discussions regarding the vitality of capitalism within transnational slavery during the nineteenth century. Throughout this book, Daniel B. Rood offers a reading of how racialized bodies linked with specific technological skills as dynamic plantation systems altered to accommodate capitalist and industrial changes to slave systems....Rood's significant monograph offers inductive analysis of technological creolization of transnational second slavery from below and provides a broad deductive contribution that links planter concerns with the inversion of white agricultural goods and the decay of the slave system. * Andrew Kettler, Journal of American History * Among the many monographs published over the last decade on the topic of...'slaveholders' capitalism,' The Reinvention ofAtlantic Slavery...ranks among the most accomplished and significant....Numerous scholars have emphasized that plantation-basedsugar cultivation was a 'modern industrial enterprise.' Rood has developed this insight with a new level of care. This book must be read by anyone with even a passing interest in its subject. * Jonathan Levy, Journal of Southern History * This highly informative book illuminates the impact of technology, competition, and resistance on the major slave economies of the nineteenth-century Americas * those of the United States, Cuba, and Brazil. Daniel Rood vividly conveys how slavery was interwoven with sugar making, wheat growing, flour kneading, cotton baling, railroad construction, maritime navigation, and other laborious and complex processes. He explains how 'racial capitalism' conscripted a captive labor force of African descent, and how the slaveholders exploited the ingenuity and knowledge of their slaves. Industrial methods intensified this slaveholder capitalisma. Rood conjures up the true commodity hell of the plantation world, showing that bondage could be, and was, abetted by technical advance and competitive pressures. * Recommended. * CHOICE * Rood's work reorients scholarly perspectives on the transformation of Atlantic economies in the mid-nineteenth century and the centrality of slavery in this transformation. His rare combination of deep attention to the management decisions of slaveholders and merchants and the labor of enslaved people is laudable and draws together disparate veins of historical research and argument. This book will be of great interest to scholars of slavery and capitalism, economic history, and the history of science and technology. * Michael Becker, H-Caribbean, H NET Reviews * Author InformationDaniel B. Rood is associate professor of history at the University of Georgia. He is the coeditor of Global Scientific Practice in the Age of Revolutions, 1750-1850. 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