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OverviewIn the spring of 1788, a group of Liverpool merchants gathered in a paneled counting house to review their quarterly returns. Among the ledgers documenting cotton imports, sugar futures, and tobacco shipments lay another set of accounts detailing a more disturbing commodity: human beings. The ship Enterprize had recently completed a profitable voyage, carrying 394 enslaved Africans across the Atlantic. After accounting for the sixty-three who died during the passage, the sale of the survivors in Charleston generated returns of nearly forty percent. The merchants reviewed these figures with the same clinical detachment they applied to any other cargo, their quills scratching calculations that reduced human suffering to columns of profit and loss. This scene, repeated in countless port cities across Europe and the Americas, reveals a fundamental truth about the early modern world: the rise of Western capitalism and the expansion of chattel slavery were not parallel developments but deeply intertwined phenomena, each feeding and sustaining the other in ways that shaped the modern world. The relationship between capitalism and slavery represents one of history's most significant and troubling intersections, yet it remains inadequately understood in popular consciousness and contested in academic discourse. Many people maintain a comfortable fiction that these two systems occupied separate moral and economic universes-that the Enlightenment values undergirding early capitalism somehow existed apart from the brutal realities of plantation slavery, or that the rational market mechanisms of emerging capitalism were fundamentally incompatible with the violence and coercion of slavery. This book challenges such compartmentalized thinking by demonstrating that Western capitalism in its formative period was not merely compatible with slavery but was substantially constructed through it. The capital that financed Europe's commercial expansion, the consumer goods that created new mass markets, the financial instruments that revolutionized banking, the labor management techniques that prefigured industrial organization, and the international trade networks that integrated distant economies all emerged from or were profoundly shaped by the enslavement of millions of Africans in the Americas. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Raymond AllardPublisher: Colloquium Verlag Imprint: Colloquium Verlag Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.286kg ISBN: 9798233283550Pages: 242 Publication Date: 20 January 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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