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The Half Has Never Been Told
The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism | Edward Baptist
Americans tend to assume that modern historiography has produced a full and complete understanding of slavery in the United States, as a shameful pre-modern institution, existing in isolation from America’s later success. But while we have long since rejected the idealistic depiction of happy slaves and paternalistic masters, we have not yet begun to grapple with the full extent of slavery’s horrors—or its link to the expansion of the country, the political battles that caused the Civil War, or the growth of our modern capitalist economy.. As historian Edward Baptist reveals in The Half Has Never Been Told, slavery and its expansion were central to the evolution and modernization of our nation in the 18th and 19th centuries, catapulting the US into a modern, industrial and capitalist economy. In the span of a single lifetime, the South grew from a narrow coastal strip of worn-out tobacco plantations to a sub-continental cotton empire. By 1861 it had five times as many slaves as it had during the Revolution, and was producing two billion pounds of cotton a year. It was through slavery and slavery alone that the United States achieved a virtual monopoly on the production of cotton, the key raw material of the Industrial Revolution, and was transformed into a global power rivaled only by England. The Half Has Never Been Told begins in 1787, when Northern emancipation and falling profits from Southern tobacco threatened the future of American slavery. Seeking desperately to prevent this collapse, innovative Southern enslavers brought slavery out of the Southeast’s decaying coastal plantation belts, leading trains of men, women, and children to the frontier states where the labor-intensive cotton crop beckoned. By 1860, their empire of cotton and labor camps stretched all the way to Texas. During America’s formative years, Baptist explains, our chief form of innovation was slavery, and ways to make slavery increasingly profitable. Through forced migration, quotas, and torture, slave owners extracted continual increases in efficiency from their slaves making competition with American cotton fields near impossible. Financial innovations and banks, meanwhile, helped feed credit to the cotton plantations, spurring on economic expansion and confirming for enslavers and their political leaders that their livelihood, and the American economy, depended on cotton. Despite the mayhem wreaked upon them, enslaved African-Americans survived, clinging desperately to the ability to name the evil they confronted. By the time of Abraham Lincoln’s election, the stories they smuggled out of the whipping-machine had helped to put the North and South on the collision course that led to the Civil War, national emancipation, and the collapse of the Southern slave industry—a system that, Baptist suggests, might otherwise have gone on indefinitely. Using thousands of interviews with former slaves, hundreds of plantation records, newspapers, and the personal papers of dozens of politicians, entrepreneurs, and escaped slaves, The Half Has Never Been Told unveils, at last, the most savage secrets at the heart of American history. These intimate stories of survival and tragedy transform our understanding of the rise of the American nation, the outbreak of the Civil War, and the birth of entrepreneurial capitalism. A much-needed challenge to the reigning narratives of slavery, The Half Has Never Been Told reveals the alarming extent to which our country’s success was irrevocably tied to the institution of slavery.
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Kathrin
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#audiobook #hoopla

I learned a lot reading this book about the half that isn‘t discussed like this in the history books.

Slajaunie Not really. This was true only with the southern plantations. Steel, oil, and industrialization were bigger factors. 5y
Kathrin @Slajaunie The author makes a good case, that the north was able to build a diversified industry that was fueled my the slave laborers in the south. 5y
Slajaunie I understand. 5y
Centique This sounds fascinating. I‘ve heard this said too - and also for wider world economics, where the wealth from sugar plantations ended up for example. Stacking this for sure. 5y
Kathrin @Centique Yes, its also talked about how England profited off the slave labor. 5y
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Kathrin
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Valeka
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When Jesmyn Ward mentions a book she read as part of her research for an upcoming project, you read the book!

Kathrin That's why I had the book on my TBR and now I finally started reading it. 5y
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lindsayp
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My God.

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OrangeMooseReads
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This was in depth and interesting. It‘s an important topic as well. For me the audio was hard to follow at times, but I‘m sure that was a me thing. I would have been better with an ebook or physical copy. Some of the information was in one ear and out the other.
More at OrangeMooseReads.wordpress.com

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OrangeMooseReads
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Been listening to this one the last few days. Incredibly interesting, heartbreaking, and infuriating.

Louise There is so much learning that we all need to do in order to understand the true history of this country. Sounds like this book is a good one to add to the TBR. 6y
Emilymdxn I‘ve been really wanting to read this one for ages! So glad to hear people think it‘s a good book 6y
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Santiago
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I think that typical narratives of American history treat slavery as a MacGuffin that may (or may not) have caused or motivated the Civil War. This book runs a counter-narrative, telling the story of America as the story of slavery, the slave trade, and the cotton trade through the Civil War. Cotton was king in the 1800's, and just what that means for our history is too often lost in the telling. You would do well to pick this up.

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PlantyLibrarian
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This book is a direct punch in the gut on why America is the way that it is - from its physical shape to its insatiable capitalist greed, even down to how our banks are structured as they are now. Slavery is what shaped this country. Slavery is what shaped the world. And it's still happening. This book is an education on the how and why and should be required reading for all.

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PlantyLibrarian

But people, and indeed the world, can change from things as invisible and acts as ephemeral as words on the wind.

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sharone
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"At five foot five, and built like a sweaty tank, [Stephen Douglas] managed with energy and invective to dominate a congress filled with taller, better looking, and better born men" (Ch. 10).

Thus may it be said of all of us--except for the sweaty tank part.