It is beyond dispute that slavery has always been abhorrent and, wherever it still exists, should be abolished. Where most scholarly writing on slavery in the past has concentrated on examining slaves as victims, recent writings have taken a more nuanced view of slavery in focusing on the slaves themselves and their cultural and psychological accomplishments in captivity. Also, studies of the system’s profitability have shown that, from an economic perspective, slavery worked for the slaveholders and their society.
In Slavery, Emancipation, and Freedom, the distinguished scholar Stanley Engerman succinctly synthesizes current scholarship and addresses questions that are critical to understanding the nature of slavery: Why did slavery arise, and how, why, where, and when did it legally end? What impact did slavery have on the enslaved? Was the impact lingering or was it reversed by the provision of freedom?
Engerman begins his study by discussing slavery from a global perspective. He reminds us of the ubiquity of slavery throughout the world, challenging the stereotype that it was only the American South’s ‘peculiar institution.’ Using the same broad comparative and temporal approach to discuss emancipation, he shows how emancipation in the southern states, several decades after it began in other parts of the world, both differed from and mirrored abolition around the globe.
Slavery, Emancipation, and Freedom is an important confrontation with America’s and the world’s past and present. Both the breadth and depth of this brief, incisive treatise demonstrate why Engerman is considered one of America’s most insightful and respected scholars.
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Stanley L. Engerman is John H. Munro Professor of Economics and Professor of History at the University of Rochester, where he has taught since 1963. He is coauthor, with Robert William Fogel, of Time on the Cross, winner of the Bancroft Prize in 1974. He is also coauthor, with Lance E. Davis, of Naval Blockades in Peace and War: An Economic History since 1750 and has written or co-dited numerous works on slavery and American and British history. He has been a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences and Pitt Professor at the University of Cambridge. Most recently, he was a fellow at the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research at Harvard University.