Reparations for Slavery and the Slave Trade: A Transnational and Comparative History
Cover -- Halftitle page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- Illustrations -- Primary Sources -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction Reparations in the Past and Present -- 1 "Greatest Riches in All America Have Arisen from Our Blood and Tears" -- The roots of the Atlantic slave trade -- Slavery and enslaved Africans in the Americas -- Africans and the Atlantic slave trade -- Slavery as a profitable institution -- Negotiating and resisting -- White numbers, Black bodies -- Slavery as a profitable human atrocity -- 2 "And What Should We Wait of these Brutish Spirits?" -- Reparations in times of revolution -- Reparations to free men, unlawfully enslaved -- The great storm of Saint-Domingue -- Former masters win again -- A lucrative institution in a nation divided -- Independence without emancipation -- The slave trade is alive and profitable -- Property rights above all rights -- The last bastion of slavery -- A pending debt -- 3 "We Helped To Pay this Cost" -- Paying the huge price -- Fighting for citizenship in precarious conditions -- Aborted citizenship and land redistribution -- Fighting for pensions as reparations for slavery -- A movement led by former slaves -- Requesting the former masters to pay back -- Republican backlash in Brazil -- Losing voting rights -- Reparations postponed -- 4"What Else Will the Negro Expect?" -- "America claims she has nothing for us" -- "Never knowed any what got land or mules nor nothing" -- The struggle for reparations under the communist alleged threat -- Reparations for slavery and the agrarian issue -- " 'Cause it was built off our backs" -- "And all of that slave labor that was amassed in unpaid wages" -- "We have been slaves too long" -- New paths for reparations -- 5 "It's Time for Us to Get Paid" -- The new wave of demands of reparations -- Combining litigation and massive demonstrations.