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book: Accounting for Slavery
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Accounting for Slavery

Masters and Management
  • Caitlin Rosenthal
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2018
View more publications by Harvard University Press

About this book

Caitlin Rosenthal explores quantitative management practices on West Indian and Southern plantations, showing how planter-capitalists built sophisticated organizations and used complex accounting tools. By demonstrating that business innovation can be a byproduct of bondage Rosenthal further erodes the false boundary between capitalism and slavery.

Reviews

Examine[s] how slavery laid the foundation of American capitalism, including the invention of financial instruments, such as bonds that used enslaved people as collateral.
-- Parul Sehgal New York Times

Slavery in the United States was a business. A morally reprehensible—and very profitable business. Much of the research around the business history of slavery focuses on the horrors of the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the business interests that fueled it. The common narrative is that today’s modern management techniques were developed in the factories in England and the industrialized North of the United States, not the plantations of the Caribbean and the American South. According to a new book by historian Caitlin Rosenthal, that narrative is wrong… Rosenthal argues that slaveholders in the American South and Caribbean were using advanced management and accounting techniques long before their northern counterparts. Techniques that are still used by businesses today.
-- Marketplace

Absolutely compelling.
-- Diane Coyle Five Books

[This] history of the accounting and management of slave plantations in the Americas goes a long way towards puncturing common-sense narratives of free market economics.
-- Martin Myers Times Higher Education

Valuable…Rosenthal proves that precise calculation of labor productivity took root in the slave economy. The irony is that it was more aggressively calculated there than among many Northern manufacturers of the time.
-- Jeremy Ray Jewell Arts Fuse

Looks at how sugar and cotton plantations organised and tracked production. It is a fascinating yet horrifying history of how planters saw the slaves they profited from—and how they drove up production…Challenges many dominant ideas about capitalism, class and progress.
-- Sadie Robinson Socialist Worker

Full of insights into the history of Atlantic slavery, Accounting for Slavery will force its readers to look with fresh eyes at the many freedoms and unfreedoms of the modern American workplace. This is an original book, which uniquely draws from and speaks to many disciplines, while written compellingly for a wide audience.
-- Jonathan Levy, University of Chicago

By paying close attention to slaveholders’ methods of keeping accounts, Caitlin Rosenthal shows how and why they tried to reduce human beings to marks on a ledger. Anyone concerned with the sometimes dark history of management, data, and modern accounting practices needs to read this brilliant, carefully argued book.
-- W. Caleb McDaniel, Rice University


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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
August 6, 2018
eBook ISBN:
9780674988590
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
312
Downloaded on 26.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.4159/9780674988590/html
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