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Home » History » The Empire of Necessity: Slavery, Freedom, and Deception in the New World Epub Download

The Empire of Necessity: Slavery, Freedom, and Deception in the New World Epub Download

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Friday, January 18, 2013

The Empire of Necessity: Slavery, Freedom, and Deception in the New World Hardcover

Author: Visit Amazon's Greg Grandin Page | Language: English | ISBN: 0805094539 | Format: PDF, EPUB

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The Empire of Necessity: Slavery, Freedom, and Deception in the New World Epub Download
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Amasa Delano was a widely traveled mariner who recounted his exploits in a memoir. One of the brief, seemingly minor experiences he described was actually rather extraordinary and revealed much about racial attitudes in the early nineteenth century. In 1805, Captain Delano and his crew were hunting seals off the coast of South America. They encountered and came to the aid of an apparently damaged and distressed ship carrying a cargo of West African slaves. A few of the slaves seemed to stick surprisingly close to the ship captain, but Delano was initially prepared to see nothing amiss. Then the captain escaped the presence of the slaves and revealed the truth to Delano: there had been a slave rebellion, and after seizing control of the ship, the slaves had slaughtered most of the crew and passengers. Delano was a New Englander imbued with republican ideals and even abolitionist sympathies. Yet when he discovered the ruse, he and his crew reacted with outrage and visited extreme violence upon the rebels. Grandin, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and a professor at New York University, delves into Delano’s motives and examines the broader contradictions between theoretical and actual commitment to political liberty and equality in this thoughtful and unsettling work. --Jay Freeman

Review

New York Times Editor's Choice
San Francisco Chronicle Recommended Book

"Engrossing, well researched and beautifully written . . . A rigorously sourced work of scholarship with a suspenseful narrative structure that boomerangs back and forth through time. Grandin has delivered a page-turner. You read it as if it were a thriller novel by Scott Turow or Lee Child."
—Chicago Tribune

"The Empire of Necessity is scholarship at its best. Greg Grandin's deft penetration into the marrow of the slave industry is compelling, brilliant and necessary."
—Toni Morrison

"Engaging, richly informed . . . Mr. Grandin ranges so freely through history that his book has a zigzagging course, like a schooner tacking constantly with the wind. But the voyage he takes us on is hardly directionless.. . . he describes his unsettling panorama in a restrained manner, avoiding exaggeration and allowing facts—many of them horrific—to tell the story. In doing so, he has produced a quietly powerful account that Melville himself would have admired."
—Wall Street Journal

"A great and moving story."
—Washington Post

"Elegant . . . a wonder of power, precision and sheer reading pleasure . . . Grandin takes readers on a tour of the hell of the slave trade, a tour so revelatory and compelling, we readers, unlike Captain Delano, can't fail to see the truth before our eyes."
—Maureen Corrigan, NPR's "Fresh Air"

"Powerful . . . a remarkable feat of research . . . a significant contribution to the largely impossible yet imperative effort to retrieve some trace of the countless lives that slavery consumed."
—Andrew Delbanco, the New York Times Book Review

"An exciting and illuminating narrative . . . Grandin's pen is exquisite, the descriptions are lively and sensuous. But he is also deeply reflective. The book has import that extends beyond the interest of the story."
—San Francisco Chronicle

"I can't say enough good things about The Empire of Necessity. It's one of the best books I've read in a decade. It should be essential reading not just for those interested in the African slave trade, but for anyone hoping to understand the commercial enterprise that built North and South America."
—Victor Lavalle, Bookforum

"A remarkable story, one that unravels the American encounter with slavery in ways uncommonly subtle and deeply provocative."
—The American Scholar

"Fascinating . . . a gripping, lavishly researched account of high seas drama . . . compulsively readable."
—The Christian Science Monitor

"Grandin writes with the skills of a fine novelist … I am thrilled and amazed by this inventive, audacious, passionate volume."
—H. Bruce Franklin, Los Angeles Review of Books


"Fascinating and engaging."
—Seattle Times

"In this multifaceted masterpiece, Greg Grandin excavates the relentlessly fascinating history of a slave revolt to mine the enduring dilemmas of politics and identity in a New World where the Age of Freedom was also the Age of Slavery. This is that rare book in which the drama of the action and the drama of ideas are equally measured, a work of history and of literary reflection that is as urgent as it is timely."
—Philip Gourevitch, co-author of the The Ballad of Abu Ghraib

"Greg Grandin has done it again. Starting with a single dramatic encounter in the South Pacific he has shown us an entire world: of multiple continents, terrible bondage and the dream of freedom. This is also a story of how one episode changed the lives of a sea captain and a great writer from the other end of the earth. An extraordinary tale, beautifully told."
—Adam Hochschild, author of King Leopold’s Ghost

"Rooted in an event known primarily through the genius of Herman Melville's transcendent Benito Cereno, The Empire of Necessity is a stunning work of research done all over the rims of two oceans, as well as beautiful, withering storytelling.・@This is a harrowing story of Muslim Africans trekking across South America, and ultimately a unique window on to the nature of the slave trade, the maritime worlds of the early nineteenth century, the lives lived in-between slavery and freedom all over the Americas, and even the ocean-inspired imagination of Melville. Grandin is a master of grand history with new insights."
—David W. Blight, author of Frederick Douglass: A Life (forthcoming)

"Greg Grandin is one of the best of a new generation of historians who have rediscovered the art of writing for both serious scholars and general readers. This may be his best book yet. The Empire of Necessity is a work of astonishing power, eloquence and suspense—a genuine tour de force."
—Debby Applegate, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Most Famous Man in America: The Biography of Henry Ward Beecher

See all Editorial Reviews

Direct download links available for The Empire of Necessity: Slavery, Freedom, and Deception in the New World Epub Download
  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Metropolitan Books; First Edition edition (January 14, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0805094539
  • ISBN-13: 978-0805094534
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.4 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
The Empire of Necessity is a marvelous example of a kind of popular history that I particularly like:

o The author chooses some fascinating, perhaps neglected, event, the narration of which might only comprise a chapter.

o He researches the hell out of it: following leads forward and backward in time, not unlike James Burke in Connections.

o He then tells every interesting story that arises from his research, often revealing unsuspected themes linking events separated by space and time.

The result can be delightfully discursive; sometimes the tangents overshadow the main event, but Grandin, with the help of Melville as a sort of tour guide, is never dull.

In this case, the main event involves a slave revolt on a ship, the Tryal, off the western coast of South America. The slaves rely on one member of the crew, Benito Cerreno, to guide the ship back to Africa, a geographically daunting proposition to begin with, as it would involve rounding Cape Horn. Inevitably, another ship, in this case a sealing ship (meaning a ship devoted to the profitable slaughter of seals), spots the Tryal and sends boats over to assist the obviously ailing ship. The slaves strategy for handling this visit is to pretend that they are still captives under the control of the few remaining whites aboard their ship. The ruse only works for a few hours; the denouement is a bloody mess. But the story resonates and serves as a launching pad for the author's exploration of slavery, sailing, capitalism, and freedom.
In college, I was engrossed and disturbed when I read BENITO CERENO, a novella by Herman Melville. In it, African slaves revolt and take over a slave ship. Then pretend to still be enslaved when confronted by an American vessel, making their prisoner, the slave ship’s Spanish captain, play along with them. I chose to read THE EMPIRE OF NECESSITY because it is centered on the true historical episode upon which Melville based his novella. The author presents a factual account of this event, and tells us what is known about the individuals involved. It’s a chilling, dramatic story and also significant history, well worth reading. Delano, the American captain, comes off as venal and quite capable of brutality not only toward the rebel slaves but his own crew. Did his supposed political ideals, derived from the American revolution, have any impact at all on his actual behavior? It does not seem so. One would like to know more about the slaves who led the shipboard rebellion. Were they Moslems, perhaps highly literate, even scholars? Much of what Grandin writes about them has to be conjecture—but it is interesting conjecture. They—the slaves—are certainly the most sympathetic figures in the narrative. They deserve to be remembered.

Grandin's refections on Melville's novella were quite interesting to me. Did Melville see the rebel slaves as evil? The varying moral judgments it is possible to read into Melville's story is part of what makes it so haunting. At different times, people have interpreted BENITO CERENO in various ways, as the Grandin shows us.

The author uses the shipboard rebellion as a centerpiece as he paints a larger picture of the slave trade in the New World. He takes us aboard slave ships and to their ports of call.

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