Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Labor in Hot Climates: The Seventeenth Century
Chapter 2: A Colony "on Fire": The Georgia Experiment,
1732-1750
Chapter 3: "An Excellent & Healthfull Situation": Colonial Patterns
of Settlement
Chapter 4: Atlantic Bodies: Health, Seasoning, and Race
Chapter 5: A Climatic Debate: The Transatlantic Slave Trade in
Parliament, 1788-1791
Chapter 6: The Place of Black Americans: Rhetoric and Race in the
Nineteenth Century
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Katherine Johnston is an Assistant Professor of History at Montana State University.
White settlers justified slave labor in hot climates with the idea
that only Black bodies could endure it. Katherine Johnston exposes
this racist myth for what it was: a lie that made plantation
America into a place of relentless brutality. The Nature of Slavery
faces this hard truth without flinching, showing how Europeans
undermined reason and science in their quest for commodity
profits.
*S. Max Edelson, author of Plantation Enterprise in Colonial South
Carolina*
Katherine Johnston's The Nature of Slavery is a superb contribution
to a growing literature on the history of race, medicine,
environments, and slavery. Carefully researched and thoughtfully
argued, the book unsettles basic assumptions about the origins of
ideas about 'biological' race. It will be a must-read for years to
come.
*Suman Seth, author of Difference and Disease: Medicine, Race, and
Locality in the Eighteenth-Century British Empire*
Consulting the public pro-slavery record, Johnston tracks the
growth of a climatic defense of southern US and Caribbean slavery
from the late eighteenth-century onward. The real breakthrough
though comes from Johnston's digging into private plantation
letters, diplomatic correspondence, and medical manuals to show
that slaveholders never believed that Africans were better suited
to labor in hot climates. Planters' awareness of the vulnerability
of all non-native bodies to the American tropics, and hence of the
similarity of Black and white embodiment, Johnston demonstrates,
has long been obscured by later historiography's reliance on
pro-slavery climate thinking. A remarkable account of the
Anglo-American roots of environmental racism relevant to scholars
of plantation history, racial science, as well as medical and
environmental history.
*Susan Scott Parrish, University of Michigan*
Johnston has mined the literary output of the Caribbean slave
plantation system, and its South Carolina/Georgia diaspora, to
produce an impressive and unique examination of the British
colonizing mentality. She shows with an abundance of examples why
the moniker, 'made in Britain' is a precise descriptor of chattel
slavery.
*Sir Hilary Beckles, The University of the West Indies*
The Nature of Slavery explodes the myth that slavery made sense
because Black people can labor in humid heat better than white
people can. Johnston traces this big lie of environmental inequity,
showing how the private writings of planters in the
eighteenth-century Caribbean contradicted their public insistence
that people from Africa were by nature suited for tropical
enslavement. This book shows how racial theorists built the
ideological foundations for human enslavement through long-lasting,
deeply pernicious ideas about health that reverberated through
Black advocacy in the nineteenth century United States and continue
to affect medical care in our present day.
*Conevery Bolton Valencius, author of The Health of the Country
*
This meticulously researched book draws on a wealth of archival
materials spanning three centuries to cast a fresh eye on the
history of African slavery in the English Caribbean and the
American South... The Nature of Slavery stands in a longer
tradition of solid scholarship in colonial history, going back to
the work of, among others, Karen Ordahl Kupperman- one of
Johnston's mentors.
*Michael Boyden, Early American Literature*
Johnston's book is a model of myth-busting and deep archival
research. In these carefully researched chapters, Johnston locates
the deadly roots of environmental racism in plantation America,
making this book a must-read for historians of slavery, race,
medicine, and the environment.
*Mary Draper, Journal of Southern History*
The Nature of Slavery is an ambitious work, not only for its
temporal or geographic scope but also for the number of
historiographies in which it seeks to intervene. Sitting as it does
at the intersection of Atlantic and environmental history, this
book will certainly interest practitioners of both...Johnston's
core argument invites us all to reconsider the stories behind the
archival or published sources we frequently use in our work. What
other records are we looking at uncritically? What other Big Lies
might we be repeating?
*Erin Stewart Mauldin, Agricultural History*
Johnston succeeds in crafting a tight argument critiquing
historians' common assumption that planters must have been drawing
on their personal experience in making claims of differing racial
responses to climate, and, in doing so, she relocates human --
really white planter -- agency from instituting racial slavery as a
reaction to climate to using climate to defend racial slavery...Her
discussion of its quick acceptance by the general white population,
including abolitionists, suggests that climatic understandings of
health were so widely held that anyone might have used them in any
argument. Whatever the depth of planters' intent, Johnston makes
the case that climatic arguments for slavery contributed to more
concrete and discreet racial categories.
*Sean Morey Smith, Journal of Early American History*
The book is a work of social and cultural history: it is concerned
with the perceptions and representations of demographic patterns
and their causes. And as a matter of perceptions and
representations, 690 Book Reviews what is clear-from the material
that Johnston includes, as well as from a host of sources that she
does not mention-is that it was a popular theme in English culture
that people from England could not stand the strain of manual labor
in the climate of the Caribbean.
*John Samuel Harpham, Journal of Modern History *
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |