Jason Sands

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Almost entirely overlooked in traditional accounts of the rise of American cotton, was the concomitant massive increase in slave productivity on the plantation, which the historian Edward Baptist has estimated at 400 percent in the period from 1800 to 1860. This, he argues, was procured through a systematic increase in violent methods of supervision and punishment, combined with ever more far-reaching record keeping:
Born in Blackness: Africa, Africans, and the Making of the Modern World, 1471 to the Second World War
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