Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism
Weekend Edition September 26-28, 2014
Edward E. Baptists "The Half Has Never Been Told"
Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism
by CHARLES R. LARSON
During the 1930s, the WPA sent out workers to interview men and women who had been slaves before the Emancipation Proclamation. It was 72 years after slavery had been abolished and the interviewees were old but their memories were still vivid. When probed by an interviewee, Lorenzo Ivy responded, Truly, son, the half has never been told. After the Civil War, black life during slavery was sanitized, deodorized and, above all, reported by Caucasiansnot by the people who had toiled under the murderous system. To a certain extent, that one-sided view has persisted. Historians of the Southlargely while mencontinued the subterfuge. And even recent attempts to set the record straight have followed in the steps of their predecessors: a chapter on families, one on women, etc., looking at groups instead of individuals.
Hence, the need for Edward E. Baptists monumental examination of slavery, presented in an entirely new way, extensively through the voices of the slaves themselves. Baptist has not simply read the WPA interviews but, apparently, every other account of what happened, particularly the many slave narratives published before and after the end of slavery. And, thenwhat is most original herehe has organized his own account by using parts of the body; for slavery was, above all, an affront to the basic dignity of the corporal body. These are the chapter titles: Feet, Heads, Right Hand, Left Hand, Tongues, Breath, Seed, Blood, Backs, and Armslargely parts of the body. The Introduction (The Heart) and the Afterword (The Corpse) complete the picture.
The first chapter (Feet) begins,
Not long after they heard the first clink of iron, the boys and girls in the cornfield would have been able to smell the grownups bodies, perhaps even before they saw the double line coming around the bend. Hurrying in locked step, the thirty-old men came down the dirt road like a giant machine. Each hauled twenty pounds of iron, chains that draped from neck to neck and wrist-to-wrist, binding them all together. Ragged strips flapped stiffly from their clothes like dead-air pennants. On the mens heads, hair stood out in growing dreads or lay in dust-caked mats. As they moved, some looked down like catatonics. Others stared at something a thousand yards ahead. And now, behind the clanking men, followed a marching crowd of women loosely roped, the same vacancy in their expressions, endurance standing out in the rigid strings of muscle that had replaced their calves in the weeks since they left Maryland. Behind them all swayed a white man on a gray walking horse.
The men (often with a thousand pounds of iron connecting them) were part of a coffle, enslaved migrants walking seven or eight hundred miles, chattel property, being moved from the north to the south because the profits when they were sold to their new owners were one hundred percent. The slave trade in Africa no longer mattered because slaves in the more northern states (Virginia, especially, but also Maryland) were reproducing so quickly that they created an entire new source of labor. Baptist gives the year as 1805, and states that eventually a million slaves were herded this way to the South. Tobacco farming in the North was less profitable than cotton farming in the South. The coffle chained the early American republic together. Slaves walked and walked for five or six weeks, performing their ablutions as they moved. There wasnt an iota of dignity for the men. Baptist refers to the entire procedure as a pattern of political compromise between the North and the South and notes that eight of the first twelve Presidents of the United States were slave owners.
More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/09/26/slavery-and-the-making-of-american-capitalism/