Supplying the Slave Trade

aw_product_id: 
39670816006
merchant_image_url: 
merchant_category: 
Books
search_price: 
25.00
book_author_name: 
Anne Ruderman
book_type: 
Hardback
publisher: 
Yale University Press
published_date: 
11/11/2025
isbn: 
9780300247305
Merchant Product Cat path: 
Books > History > Historical events & topics > Social & cultural history
specifications: 
Anne Ruderman|Hardback|Yale University Press|11/11/2025
Merchant Product Id: 
9780300247305
Book Description: 
How European enslavers tried to meet African consumer demand for their trade goods in the eighteenth-century transatlantic slave trade   The enormous evil that was the transatlantic slave trade resulted from millions of commercial actions. In Atlantic Africa, European enslavers and African merchants exchanged bundles of goods for small numbers of enslaved people over and over again. To purchase captives, European enslavers needed to meet the tastes and preferences of their African trading partners, which varied over time and across the coast. How did they know what their African customers wanted?   Anne Ruderman’s extensive research into the transatlantic slave trade reveals how enslavers obtained information about consumer demand from the African coast, worked with suppliers to acquire the right trade goods, and then brought those goods to the markets where they were wanted. African consumer demand shaped the transatlantic slave trade, both on the African coast and deep in the European interior, as European enslavers ranged far and wide to get the trade goods their partners desired.    The legacy of race-based slavery continues to define socioeconomic structures, institutions, opportunities, and daily life in modern Europe, Africa, and the Americas. The transatlantic slave trade set this process of racial inequity in motion. And behind the commerce in captives were the trade goods that made it possible.

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