From the sixteenth to early-nineteenth century, four times more
Africans than Europeans crossed the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas.
While this forced migration stripped slaves of their liberty, it
failed to destroy many of their cultural practices, which came with
Africans to the New World. In Working the Diaspora, Frederick
Knight examines work cultures on both sides of the Atlantic, from
West and West Central Africa to British North America and the
Caribbean.
Knight demonstrates that the knowledge that Africans carried
across the Atlantic shaped Anglo-American agricultural development
and made particularly important contributions to cotton, indigo,
tobacco, and staple food cultivation. The book also compellingly
argues that the work experience of slaves shaped their views of the
natural world. Broad in scope, clearly written, and at the center
of current scholarly debates, Working the Diaspora challenges
readers to alter their conceptual frameworks about Africans by
looking at them as workers who, through the course of the Atlantic
slave trade and plantation labor, shaped the development of the
Americas in significant ways.
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