"This is an ambitious and necessary retelling of the history of Atlantic slavery. Araujo sheds fascinating light on slavery as lived experience, on women and the family, and on culture and resistance. Perhaps above all, the book is a call for historians to engage and challenge the manipulation and silencing of slavery's history in the public sphere."-- "Ada Ferrer, author of Cuba: An American History"
"One of the most gifted historians of slavery and its afterlives offers a compelling, provocative, and original interpretation of slave life in the Atlantic world. Mobilizing an astonishing array of published and archival primary sources, Araujo brings enslaved persons to the forefront with their names and their experiences under bondage of life, death, love, spirituality, oppression, resistance, and freedom. Humans in Shackles will be the best introduction to this painful and complex history of slavery in the Atlantic."-- "João José Reis, coauthor of The Story of Rufino: Slavery, Freedom, and Islam in the Black Atlantic"
"In this sweeping and essential historical analysis of Atlantic slavery, Araujo shows how slavery contributed to the growth and development of the Americas while emphasizing the role that African history played in shaping the transatlantic slave trade and slave societies. Rather than seeing slavery as an aberration in the history of Western freedom, readers will come to understand slavery as a fundamental institution common to the Americas, with continuing legacies throughout that demand our attention."-- "Vincent Brown, author of Tacky's Revolt: The Story of an Atlantic Slave War"
"Humans in Shackles is a brilliant transnational history that will stand out as a landmark work in the field of Atlantic slavery. Araujo is uniquely positioned to produce such a comprehensive and yet human history because of the empathy and imagination she brings to her research and writing. This book is exemplary of the historical imagination in the best way."-- "Toby Green, author of A Fistful of Shells: West Africa from the Rise of the Slave Trade to the Age of Revolution"
"A sweeping and essential history of the slave trade."-- "Kirkus"