Jason Sands

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Many historians have also objected to the way that the standard narrative of the Whitney gin’s invention long promoted a view of the South as a world of indolent slaves and backward whites. The region’s denizens were presented as having been powerless to fundamentally change the economics of the region—that is, until fortune brought them Whitney, a Yale-educated northerner who quickly solved the riddle bedeviling the production of a crop that he had no prior exposure
Born in Blackness: Africa, Africans, and the Making of the Modern World, 1471 to the Second World War
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