New Books in Intellectual History

John Samuel Harpham, "Intellectual Origins of American Slavery: English Ideas in the Early Modern Atlantic World" (Harvard UP, 2025)

Jan 19, 2026
John Samuel Harpham, an Assistant Professor at the University of Oklahoma, dives into the intellectual origins of American slavery, tracing ideas from ancient Rome through early modern thinkers. He discusses how English authors leveraged Roman law and natural rights theories to justify slavery, blending moral logic with economic interests. Harpham examines the evolution of perceptions about Africa, including the influence of travel narratives and the notorious Prester John legend. His insights expose the complex interplay between race and the emerging institution of slavery.
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ANECDOTE

Personal Roots Of The Project

  • John Samuel Harpham grew up in New Orleans and was shaped by the city's visible legacy of slavery.
  • That personal background motivated his focus on how slavery became seen as morally legitimate.
INSIGHT

Two Competing Traditions On Slavery

  • Early modern English thought hosted two competing traditions: Aristotle's natural-slavery and Roman law's law-of-nations model.
  • Harpham shows English thinkers mostly adopted the Roman-law model that treated slavery as arising from human institutions, not nature.
INSIGHT

How Early Modern Philosophers Framed Enslavement

  • Grotius, Hobbes, and Pufendorf rejected Aristotle's natural-slavery and aligned more with Roman law asserting natural freedom.
  • Each offered distinct legal routes (consent, war, compact) by which people could nonetheless become enslaved.
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