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How Olaudah Equiano Weaponized His Story


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Polar explorer, Royal Navy combat veteran, successful entrepreneur, radical political activist, and author of a global bestseller that helped end the British slave trade. If you pitched that resume to a studio, it would get rejected for being unrealistic. It also belonged to one man. This episode is a deep dive into Olaudah Equiano, known for most of his life as Gustavus Vassa, and the autobiography he weaponized against the institution that once owned him.

We trace the journey: the kidnapping from Igbo land, the Middle Passage, his enslavement to a Royal Navy officer who renamed him after a Swedish king, his frontline service during the Seven Years' War, the second cycle of enslavement that nearly destroyed him, his self-purchased freedom in 1766, his ventures in trade and Arctic exploration with Constantine Phipps, and his rise into London's abolitionist Sons of Africa.

We unpack the moment that changed Britain: his decision to bring the Zong massacre to Granville Sharp. By framing the murder of more than 130 enslaved Africans as a fraudulent insurance claim, Equiano turned a courtroom into a moral spotlight. We then turn to The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano (1789), the bestseller that bankrolled the abolitionist movement, and the modern question of which name (Equiano or Vassa) was real and which was the strategic persona that finally moved Parliament.

Subscribe to pplpod for more deep dives into people who reshaped history. Topics: Olaudah Equiano, Gustavus Vassa, The Interesting Narrative, Sons of Africa, Zong massacre, abolition, transatlantic slave trade, 18th-century London, slave narratives.

Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 5/3/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.

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