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  1. L’historien anglais James Walvin s’en est saisi et nous offre un essai très documenté, Histoire du sucre, histoire du monde. James Walvin, Histoire du sucre, histoire du monde. Trad. de l’anglais par Philippe Pignarre. La Découverte, 300 p., 22 €. L’efficace ouvrage de James Walvin raconte la longue histoire de la corruption du ...

  2. James Walvin escribió «Breve historia de la esclavitud» en 2007, por el bicentenario de la abolición de la trata de esclavosen el Reino Unido y en sus colonias. Experto en esta compleja materia, el autor presenta una selección de textos históricos que permiten acercarse a la mentalidad de quien ha sostenidouna institución tan aberrante ...

  3. "Walvin shows that slavery mattered in the past and matters now, in powerful and compelling prose. It is a tour de force."—Family & Community History"No historian on either side of the Atlantic has captured this sweeping, epic story of inhumanity, mass migration, cultural transformation, and global empire quite like James Walvin.

  4. 'James is a titan of twentieth-century politics and culture' Sunday Times'The Black Jacobins is not only a groundbreaking historical work; it is a masterpiece in storytelling and analysis' Gary YoungeThe iconic study of the Haitian revolution, by one of the most important historians of the twentieth centuryC. L. R. James's pioneering account of the 1791 San Domingo slave revolt and the ...

  5. James Walvin Suivre le sucre pour éclairer l’histoire du monde : tel est le stupéfiant voyage auquel nous invite James Walvin. Tout commence avec la colonisation des Caraïbes et des Amériques, puis avec l’essor des plantations.

  6. Join social historian, University of York professor emeritus, and author of Sugar: The World Corrupted, From Slavery to Obesity, James Walvin, as he uncovers...

  7. 19 de jul. de 2021 · Walvin, James. Freedom: The Overthrowing of the Slave Empires.New York: Penguin, 2019. There is a line I’ve used for almost a decade now, whether leading tours at national historic sites or coaching high schoolers through their unit on the American Civil War: “In 1861, only two countries in the Atlantic world allowed slavery: Brazil and the United States.”