Varun Shetty

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In the space of a short few decades, though, meaning by the middle of the nineteenth century, it had ridden plantation slavery—based on one crop above all, cotton—to become a rapidly industrializing nation and an incipient world power. Indeed, as one historian has written, “The cotton trade was the economy’s only ‘major expansive force.’”
Born in Blackness: Africa, Africans, and the Making of the Modern World, 1471 to the Second World War
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