When we talk about slavery in Early America, we often focus on plantations: their large, fertile fields, their cash crops, and the people who labored on those fields to produce those cash crops under conditions of enslavement.
But what about the ordinary objects that made slavery work? The shoes, axes, cloth, and hoes? What can these everyday objects reveal about the economic and social systems that sustained slavery in the early United States?
Seth Rockman, a Professor of History at Brown University and author of Plantation Goods: A Material History of Slavery, which was a finalist for the 2025 Pulitzer Prize in History, joins us to rethink how Northern manufacturing, labor, and commerce were entangled with the southern slave economy.
Sethβs Website | Book |
Show Notes: https://www.benfranklinsworld.com/422
RECOMMENDED NEXT EPISODES
π§ Bonus: Lonnie Bunch: History & Historians in the Public
π§ Episode 084: How Historians Read Historical Sources
π§ Episode 244: Shoe Stories from Early America
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π§ Episode 406: Threads of Power
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