Wendy Warren received her PhD in history from Yale University and is currently an assistant professor in the Department of History at Princeton University. She lives in New Jersey.
"Whereas most studies of slavery in the United States concern the
antebellum South, this one stakes out less visited territory—the
laws and decisions made by the colonists in New England two
centuries earlier."
*The New Yorker*
"[Warren] builds on and generously acknowledges more than two
generations of research into the social history of New England and
the economic history of the Atlantic world. But not only has
she mastered that scholarship, she has also brought it together in
an original way, and deepened the story with fresh research…New
England Bound conveys the disorientation, the deprivation, the
vulnerability, the occasional hunger and the profound isolation
that defined the life of most African exiles in Puritan New
England, where there was no plantation community."
*Christopher L. Brown - New York Times Book Review*
"'Slavery was in England’s American colonies, even its New England
colonies, from the very beginning,' explains Princeton historian
Wendy Warren in her deeply thoughtful, elegantly written New
England Bound....The greatest revelations of New England Bound lie
in Warren’s meticulous reconstruction of slavery in colonial New
England....Warren pores over the patchy archival record with a
probing eye and an ear keen to silences."
*Maya Jasanoff - New York Review of Books*
"[Warren] widens the lens to show the early New England economy was
enmeshed in the seafaring trade that developed between four
Atlantic continents for the transport, clothing, and feeding of
African captives. The region’s early growth and prosperity, Warren
shows, sprang from that tainted commerce. . . . Southerners
resentful of Northerners’ condescension about the slaveholding past
may find some comfort in these pages. In them should be some
Northern discomfort too."
*Kenneth J. Cooper - Boston Globe*
"Historians have written penetratingly on North American colonial
racism and slavery—Edmund Morgan, Alden Vaughan, Ira Berlin, for
starters—but New England Bound is a smart contribution to the New
England story, a panoptical exploration of how slavery took root
like a weed in the crack of a sidewalk. . . . What we have in this
account is sharp explication of the ‘deadly symbiosis’ of
colonization and slavery, written with a governed verve that perks
like a coffee pot. It makes the New England story that much fuller,
challenging, and more accountable."
*Peter Lewis - Christian Science Monitor*
"A bracing and fearless inquiry into the intricate web of slavery
and empire into which all New Englanders were bound. Ardently
argued, and urgently necessary."
*Jill Lepore, author of New York Burning*
"A beautifully written, humane and finely researched work that
makes clear how closely intermingled varieties of slavery and New
England colonization were from the very start. With great skill,
Warren does full justice to the ideas of the individuals involved,
as well as to the political and economic imperatives that drove
some, and that trapped and gravely damaged others."
*Linda Colley, author of Captives: Britain, Empire, and the World,
1600-1850*
"Wendy Warren's deeply researched and powerfully written New
England Bound opens up a new vista for the study of slavery and
race in the United States. It will transform our thinking about
seventeenth-century New England."
*Annette Gordon-Reed, author of The Hemingses of Monticello, winner
of the Pulitzer Prize*
"New England Bound is a book of revelations. Not only does Wendy
Warren cast startling new light on early America, not only does she
uncover how racial slavery was woven into the fabric of New England
from the very beginning, but she also shows how forgotten
folk—people long thought lost to history—can be brought to light,
and to life, if we look, and listen, for their stories. A
remarkable achievement."
*James Merrell, author of Into the American Woods, winner of the
Bancroft Prize*
"With intrepid research and stunning narrative skill, Wendy Warren
demonstrates how much seventeenth-century New England societies
were dependent on the West Indian slave trade, and especially on
the labor, bodies, and lives of black slaves. Warren has turned the
prophetic lessons of Ecclesiastes back upon the Puritan fathers
with scholarly judgment, humanizing both them and the people they
enslaved. This book is an original achievement, the kind of history
that chastens our historical memory as it makes us wiser."
*David W. Blight, Yale University, author of Race and Reunion*
"In New England Bound, Wendy Warren builds a powerful case for the
centrality of slavery to the economy of the Puritan colonies in the
North."
*Joyce Appleby, author of The Relentless Revolution*
"A major contribution to the history of enslavement, of African
Americans, of early New England society, and—most important—of the
sinews and tissues at the center of the whole complex process we
call 'colonization.' The research that supports it is ingenious,
the argument compelling, the prose lucid and graceful."
*John Demos, author of The Heathen School*
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