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Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
This is a new release of the original 1928 edition.
Being An Account Of His Career And Adventures On The Coast, In The
Interior, On Shipboard, And In The West Indies.
Sometimes published as *Adventures of an African Slaver,* this
replica of the 1854 first edition restores its original title. All
of its unique power remains intact. Adapted from the journals,
memoranda, and conversations of French-Italian seafarer and
notorious slaver CAPTAIN THEODORE CANOT (1804-1860), this vivid and
unexaggerated depiction of the slave trade between Africa and the
New World is prized as a firsthand account of every aspect of the
industry, from how slaves are purchased to the first reactions of
newly arrived slaves to the New World and beyond. Explicit and
shocking, this volume is also a startling illustration of the
racist attitudes of its day, from Canot's justifications for the
slave trade to the introduction by American journalist BRANTZ MAYER
(1809-1879), who compiled Canot's material for publication and
defended his subject's work. This is essential reading for anyone
interested in the history of American slavery.
Grim account by a former slave ship captain describes the apalling
machinery of the commercial slave trade, including the harems and
"factories" maintained by slavers, treatment and discipline of
black Africans on slave ships, the suppression of slave revolts at
sea, and much more. Republication of the classic 1854
edition.
Being An Account Of His Career And Adventures On The Coast, In The
Interior, On Shipboard, And In The West Indies.
Grim account by a former slave ship captain describes the apalling
machinery of the commercial slave trade, including the harems and
"factories" maintained by slavers, treatment and discipline of
black Africans on slave ships, the suppression of slave revolts at
sea, and much more. Republication of the classic 1854
edition.
The career of the Franco-Italian slave trader Theodore Canot
(1804-60) was long and eventful. This intimate and sometimes
graphic insight into the slave trade, first published in 1854, was
edited by the American historian and author Brantz Mayer (1809-79),
who compiled it in close collaboration with Canot. Brantz
considered his subject to be a man of unquestionable integrity
whose story needed to be heard. Beginning with Canot's introduction
to seafaring, the book is enriched by vivid anecdotes and
occasional illustrations. From an encounter with Lord Byron to
shocking descriptions of massacres, the narrative describes
multiple aspects of the slave trade: purchasing slaves; storing
human cargo; the suppression of slave revolts; the establishment of
the slave trade in new regions; and the legal, financial and
practical requirements of running a slave ship. A counterpoint to
accounts by slaves themselves, this work reflects the attitudes of
its time.
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