Race Traffic: Antislavery and the Origins of White Victimhood, 1619-1819

Gunther Peck

Book cover for Race Traffic: Antislavery and the Origins of White Victimhood, 1619-1819
Book cover for Race Traffic: Antislavery and the Origins of White Victimhood, 1619-1819

Race Traffic: Antislavery and the Origins of White Victimhood, 1619-1819

Race Traffic: Antislavery and the Origins of White Victimhood, 1619-1819

Gunther Peck

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Description

Fantasies of white slavery and the narratives of victimhood they spawn form the foundation of racist ideology. They also obscure the lived experience of trafficked servants and sailors in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Gunther Peck moves deftly between the Atlantic and Mediterranean worlds to discover where and when people with light skin color came to see themselves as white. Separating fact from fiction, and paying close attention to the ideological work each performs, Peck shows how laboring women and men leveraged their newfound whiteness to secure economic opportunity and political power.

Peck argues that whiteness emerged not as a claim of racial superiority but as a byproduct of wide-ranging and rancorous public debate over trafficking and enslavement. Even as whiteness became a legal category that signaled privilege, trafficking and race remained tightly interwoven. Those advocating for the value of whiteness invoked emotionally freighted victimhood, claiming that so-called white slavery was a crime whose costs far exceeded those associated with the enslavement of African peoples across the Americas. Peck helps us understand the chilling history that produced the racist ideology that still poisons our politics in the present day.

Critical Reviews

"Peck has published an important study that covers a wide range of subjects and literatures. . . . Race Traffic could work in classrooms at an advanced level. In those classes, students are likely to ask . . . who has it worse in any given period: servants, convicts, or enslaved people? This book can help answer that question in new ways by explaining the political work that [these] comparisons have accomplished, focusing on a broad geography where human trafficking and race become mutually constitutive."--William & Mary Quarterly

"Peck draws innovatively from novels, travelogues, petitions, and poetry and also creatively uses digital tools to trace usage. . . . Recommended."--CHOICE

Publishing Information

Publisher: Omohundro Institute and Unc Press
Pub date: 2024-12-10
Length: 512 pages

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