New Books in Western European Studies

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

Jan 9, 2026
John Samuel Harpham, an Assistant Professor of Classics and Letters, navigates the intriguing intellectual landscape surrounding the origins of American slavery. He delves into how ancient Roman laws influenced early English views on slavery, arguing that these ideas became the foundation for justifying the slave trade. Harpham discusses notable philosophers like Locke and Grotius, and explores how navigational narratives reshaped perceptions of Africa. The moral contradictions in plantation slavery and racialized justifications for slavery also feature prominently in this thought-provoking dialogue.
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INSIGHT

Ideas Shaped Slavery’s Early Legitimacy

  • John Samuel Harpham frames his project as tracing how slavery became morally seen as legitimate in early America.
  • He argues ideas mattered alongside economic interests rather than being reducible to them.
INSIGHT

Two Competing Traditions On Slavery

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

Philosophers Recast Slavery As Legal Status

  • Grotius, Hobbes, and Pufendorf rejected Aristotelian natural slavery and followed a Roman-law model of natural freedom.
  • They explained enslavement via consent, punishment, or capture in war, situating slavery within legal categories.
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