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What others are saying about The Slave Ship:
“The Slave Ship is
truly a magnificent and disturbing book—disturbing not only because it details
the violence and barbarism of the free market in human beings, but it reminds us
that all actors in this drama are human, including the ship’s crew. The Slave
Ship is not for the faint hearted, but like the millions who took this voyage in
the past, we have no choice. We have to come to terms with this history if we
want to understand how this modern, racialized and globalized economy based on
exploitation came to be.”
"The Slave Ship is a tour de force. Never before has the reality of the trade
been so comprehensively and subtly conveyed. Marcus Rediker 's intimate
knowledge of sea faring in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries enables him
to reconstruct the life – and death – of those on the slave trading vessels more
vividly and convincingly than any previous historian. I am sure that the book
will continue to be read as long as people want to understand this crucial
episode in the birth of the modern world.” “The slave ship was
a machine that manufactured modernity. As it moved across the Atlantic, the
world changed. It joined Europe, Africa, and the Americas, creating enormous
wealth and untold misery, and its hellish voyages continue to cast a shadow
over our lives. Marcus Rediker, a preeminent historian the maritime
Atlantic, unravels its history with unmatched knowledge of the material
changes and moral ruptures it created. The Slave Ship is the best of
histories, deeply researched, brilliantly formulated, and morally informed.”
"The slave ship is an open metaphoric wound
lying at the heart of attempts to understand the middle passage. Marcus
Rediker's remarkable new book combines a uniquely profound understanding of the
maritime industries in the eighteenth century with an imaginative humanism. No
other book has displayed such combined practicality and compassion regarding the
actual workings of 'the abominable traffick.' Rediker’s work is important not
only because of what it uncovers, but because it suggests ways of overcoming the
disastrous legacy of the slave trade. The Slave Ship struck me with the
force of prophecy, it is a superbly realized work that will actually change the
living memory of slavery, and only Marcus Rediker could have written it."
“Mixing powerful vignettes with astute
analysis, Marcus Rediker brings the terrible dramas of the middle passage to
life. This beautifully written and exhaustively researched book gives us
unforgettable portraits of the captives, captains, and crewmen who came together
in that particular kind of hell known as the slave ship. This is Atlantic
history at its best.”
“This Atlantic epic brilliantly reveals the
slave ship as a ‘vast machine,’ transforming its human cargo into slaves—but it
is also a precise portrayal of Africans, free and captive, in their choices and
desperate struggles.”
“The Atlantic's foremost historian from below
has written a masterpiece. In this human history you can hear the shrieks of
pain, the groans of loss, and uproar of rebellion. In the midst of mass and
calculated murders Rediker finds the genesis of a human story that delineated
ethnicities, that created musical lamentations, that caused heart‑rending
resistance, that produced African and human consciousness, and in the end, with
ex‑slaves offering amazing graces to discarded sailors, the cry still rises up
from this magnificent book for justice and for reparation.”
“Marcus Rediker is one of the most
distinguished historians of the eighteenth‑century Atlantic world, and he brings
to the slave ship both an unrivaled knowledge of maritime labor and transport
and a deep theoretical perspective on the slave trade's role in the rise of
capitalism. His is a ‘human history’ with all its dramas and complex
lineaments.”
“Marcus Rediker, like the incomparable Herman
Melville, understands both the immediate human drama and the sweeping global
context of life aboard a cramped ocean vessel in the age of sail. Now Rediker
brings his informed passion, energetic research, rich storytelling, and stark
analysis to perhaps the most wrenching, important and neglected topic in the
early modern Atlantic World. Following in the wake of such pioneers as W. E. B.
DuBois and Elizabeth Donnan, Rediker joins a growing group of scholars who are
reinvigorating historical research on the huge traffic in enslaved Africans. Two
centuries after the abolition of the English and North American slave trade, he
uses his unique gifts to take us below decks, giving a human face to the inhuman
ordeal of the Middle Passage.”
“The Slave Ship
is a book, like Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, that will change the way
we see history and ourselves. In this brilliant work, Marcus Rediker achieves
the impossible: he enables us to imagine centuries of unimaginable cruelty. He
also enables us to imagine the resistance to slavery that eventually brought it
down, through the evocation of unforgettable characters: Olaudah Equiano, a
slave who recorded the ordeal of the Middle Passage in his autobiography; James
Field Stanfield, the anti-slavery sailor and poet; John Newton, the slave ship
captain turned abolitionist who wrote ‘Amazing Grace.’ Rediker writes with the
care of a scholar, the eye of a poet, and the heart of a rebel. He does justice
to the story of a monstrous injustice.” To purchase a signed copy of this book or inquire about publishing rights, e-mail Contact@MarcusRediker.com |
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