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Seth Rockman on Slavery's Material History


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Episode: Seth Rockman on Slavery's Material History
Pub date: 2024-12-02

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A simple leather shoe. A scratchy shirt made of cotton or wool. A roughly-hewn axe. A leather whip, braided in New Jersey. Southern slavery did not just depend on an extractive economic system, or a highly-unequal racial and social order, or a brutal regime of labor exploitation—even though it needed all of those things. It also required a vast array of goods: real, tangible tools and garments that were usually made in the North and used in the South.

Seth Rockman’s new book follows those everyday objects: from their production, to their sale, to their distribution and use on plantations. Along the way, he reveals the economic and imaginative ties that linked people living across antebellum America—North and South. And he explains how those plantation goods could become sites of struggle, as slaves used them to contest the terms of their bondage.



The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Jessica Levy and Dylan Gottlieb, which is the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Listen Notes, Inc.
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The ChatterboxBy The Syllabus / Listen Notes