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Eighty years late: groundbreaking work on slave economy is finally published in UK

(6 Posts)
GagaJo Sun 23-Jan-22 11:31:04

Crazy that it took this long to be published. Probably because 'We almost act as if we weren’t involved in it (slavery). We focus on the fact that we abolished it, we don’t like to talk about what Williams talks about in the book: that we made a load of money out of it, that it was – more than anything else – an economic exercise. It made so many people in Britain so rich, and that wealth still exists today.”

In 1938, a brilliant young Black scholar at Oxford University wrote a thesis on the economic history of British empire and challenged a claim about slavery that had been defining Britain’s role in the world for more than a century.

But when Eric Williams – who would later become the first prime minister of Trinidad and Tobago – sought to publish his “mind-blowing” thesis on capitalism and slavery in Britain, he was shunned by publishers and accused of undermining the humanitarian motivation for Britain’s Slavery Abolition Act.

Now, 84 years after his work was rejected in the UK, and 78 years after it was first published in America, where it became a highly influential anti-colonial text, Williams’s book, Capitalism and Slavery, will finally be published in Britain by a mainstream British publisher.

www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jan/23/eighty-years-late-groundbreaking-work-on-slave-economy-is-finally-published-in-uk

TopsyIrene06 Sun 23-Jan-22 14:08:03

About time too GagaJo.

The more people that can access this literature, the better their understanding of slavery will be. Hopefully a copy will be on display in all libraries, bookshops and on the school curriculum if not already being taught.

MaizieD Sun 23-Jan-22 16:00:02

I look forward to reading it.

Though I think that over recent years it has become far more high profile and a bit better understood in the UK.

Kali2 Tue 25-Jan-22 11:15:15

Thanks, will look at for it. Our family has roots in slavery from so many countries, India, Malaysia and Africa.

Grany Tue 25-Jan-22 17:04:33

The queen is wealthy from inherited profits from the slave trade passed on down from queen Victoria.

Blossoming Tue 25-Jan-22 17:08:17

It started long before that Grany. Charles II profited handsomely from the slave trade.