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Professor James Walvin

    James Walvin es un Profesor Emérito de Historia, tras haber enseñado durante muchos años en la Universidad de York. Sus extensas publicaciones se centran en la historia de la esclavitud y el comercio de esclavos, por lo que recibió el prestigioso premio Martin Luther King Memorial Prize. También ha explorado la historia del fútbol, con un libro pionero que se mantiene impreso más de treinta años después de su publicación inicial. Las obras de Walvin son valoradas por su profunda visión histórica y su meticulosa investigación.

    A World Transformed
    Resistance, Rebellion & Revolt
    • A World Transformed

      • 400 páginas
      • 14 horas de lectura

      This comprehensive study examines how slavery and enslaved people have shaped the modern world. It argues that a full understanding of slavery requires moving beyond traditional national histories, collecting recent scholarship into a cohesive narrative. The author presents a global story that encompasses the capitalist economy, labor, environment, and social culture, including ideas of family, beauty, and taste. The book emphasizes the profound role of slavery in the formation of the modern world, highlighting the enforced transportation and labor of millions of Africans as a significant social and economic force. This catalyzed the rapid development of extensive trading systems with far-reaching global consequences. The labor and products of enslaved individuals transformed consumption patterns across continents, influencing societies in India, Asia, Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Slavery's impact shaped many dominant features of Western culture, including luxury items that may seem disconnected from its brutal reality. The narrative traces the enduring global effects of slavery over centuries, extending beyond legal or historical milestones, and asserts that the world created by slave labor continues to resonate today.

      A World Transformed2022
      3,8
    • Resistance, Rebellion & Revolt

      • 320 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      'Long before the friends of African freedom began to agitate for black freedom, the enslaved themselves had created their own strategies of resistance. In time, their defiance was to prove the crucial final factor in bringing down slavery itself.' James Walvin, in Resistance, Rebellion and Revolt

      Resistance, Rebellion & Revolt2020
      4,2