American Mirror

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A01=Roberto Saba
Abolitionism
Advertising
Agriculture
Alagoas
American Colonization Society
Americans in Brazil
Author_Roberto Saba
Behalf
Birth rate
Brazilians
Bronze Age
Brotas
Bureaucrat
Campinas
Capitalism
Category=NHK
Category=NHTS
Chincha Islands
Citizenship
Civil marriage
Cowardice
Cyrus West Field
Debtor
Despot (court title)
E. P. Thompson
Entrepreneurship
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Free Republic
Friedrich Engels
Government
Great power
Hospitality
Ideology
Impunity
Institution
Intensive farming
Irrationality
Labour power
Law school
Leather
Legislator
Logging
Long Depression
Mass meeting
Matthew Fontaine Maury
Medal
New York City
New York Courier and Enquirer
Old World
Opportunism
Oppression
Plantation
Plantations in the American South
Port of Rio de Janeiro
Public lecture
Puppet state
Reactionary
Salary
Scientific enterprise
Scientist
Seeder
Self-determination
Self-sufficiency
Separatism
Sewing machine
Slavery
Social justice
Social movement
State government
Stimulant
Unfree labour
Union Army
Water supply
White Southerners

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691202693
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Dec 2024
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How slave emancipation transformed capitalism in the United States and Brazil

In the nineteenth century, the United States and Brazil were the largest slave societies in the Western world. The former enslaved approximately four million people, the latter nearly two million. Slavery was integral to the production of agricultural commodities for the global market, and governing elites feared the system’s demise would ruin their countries. Yet, when slavery ended in the United States and Brazil, in 1865 and 1888 respectively, what resulted was immediate and continuous economic progress. In American Mirror, Roberto Saba investigates how American and Brazilian reformers worked together to ensure that slave emancipation would advance the interests of capital.

Saba explores the methods through which antislavery reformers fostered capitalist development in a transnational context. From the 1850s to the 1880s, this coalition of Americans and Brazilians—which included diplomats, engineers, entrepreneurs, journalists, merchants, missionaries, planters, politicians, scientists, and students, among others—consolidated wage labor as the dominant production system in their countries. These reformers were not romantic humanitarians, but cosmopolitan modernizers who worked together to promote labor-saving machinery, new transportation technology, scientific management, and technical education. They successfully used such innovations to improve production and increase trade.

Challenging commonly held ideas about slavery and its demise in the Western Hemisphere, American Mirror illustrates the crucial role of slave emancipation in the making of capitalism.

Roberto Saba is assistant professor of American Studies at Wesleyan University.

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