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David Silkenat, "Scars on the Land: An Environmental History of Slavery in the American South" (Oxford UP, 2022)

Dec 8, 2025
David Silkenat, a senior lecturer in American history at the University of Edinburgh, delves into how enslaved people shaped and were shaped by the Southern environment in his book. He highlights the profound impact of Southern planters' exploitation on ecosystems, from soil depletion to invasive species. Silkenat discusses the role of wild spaces as both refuge and threat for the enslaved, and how hurricanes disproportionately affected them. He connects historical environmental choices to modern issues of climate and racial justice, emphasizing enduring scars.
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INSIGHT

Labor Over Land Drives Expansion

  • Southern planters prioritized extracting maximum labor over maintaining land health, viewing land as disposable.
  • This mindset drove continual westward expansion rather than sustainable farming.
ANECDOTE

Charles Ball's Witness Across Landscapes

  • Charles Ball's fugitive narrative traces being sold from Chesapeake to rice plantations and observes environmental devastation.
  • His account links violence against people to the brutalization of the land.
INSIGHT

Soil Loss Cascades Through Ecosystems

  • Soil depletion and erosion weren’t isolated losses; sediment runoff degraded rivers and fisheries downstream.
  • Enslavers' willingness to abandon worn lands amplified ecological collapse across regions.
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