In this engaging book, David Brion Davis offers an illuminating perspective on American slavery. Nathan I. Huggins Lectures. Harvard University Press, First Edition 2003, 2006.
David Brion Davis was an American historian and authority on slavery and abolition in the Western world. He was the Sterling Professor of History Emeritus at Yale University, and founder and Director Emeritus of Yale’s Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition. He was a foremost intellectual and cultural historian. The author and editor of 17 books, and frequent contributor to The New York Review of Books, Davis played a principal role in explaining the latest historiography to a broad audience. His books emphasized religious and ideological links among material conditions, political interests, and new political values.
Quick read, good refresher. The thesis that Southern slaveholders created the antislavery movement by overreacting to all antislavery sentiments is funny, but a little too dismissive of black radicals. Makes out the Southern slaveholders as a lot stronger and richer than they were, since he ignores their huge debts financed by Northern banks.
This is really a collection of three distinct essays by Davis about slavery in America. The first essay is an amazing summary of how slavery came to be the horror that it became in America. In particular, he explains in historical terms how slavery and racism fed each other in a frightening way. It is absolutely brilliant and bursting with new insights that still have my head reeling. The second and third essays cannot help but be a bit of a letdown after that. They are engaging nevertheless. A short but sobering read.
This short work covers a lot of ground and offers some great anecdotes. Im not sure it offered any novel insights but it gives an interesting overview.
The best short summary of the topic I've read - does a great job of painting the historical arc of slavery and freedom, and situating the American experience within that arc and within its historical context. Highly recommend.
Very concise summary and look at various political, economic, and social justice factors that surrounds slavery--with a particular focus on relation to American slavery