"By pursuing a method of 'follow the things, ' adopting an innovative narrative structure, and analyzing a rich collection of archival and material evidence, Seth Rockman deftly unpacks the culture and commerce of plantation goods that perniciously shaped racial 'knowledge' while making fortunes and channeling labor. This stunning study overflows with penetrating yet sensitive insights, capturing the nuanced experiences and interlocking relationships that formed a tainted yet consequential trans-regional enterprise."
--Tiya Miles, author of All That She Carried: the Journey of Ashley's Sack, a Black Family Keepsake
"Rockman has given us a brilliant book that shows how slavery permeated the American landscape. Clearly written and deeply researched, Plantation Goods is a much-needed contribution to the study of the institution that helped define early America and, therefore, helped make us who we are today."
--Annette Gordon-Reed, author of The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family
"Seth Rockman is one of the most creative and original American historians writing today, as Plantation Goods richly demonstrates. He casts a brilliant new light on the deeply studied subjects of slavery and capitalism."--Marcus Rediker, author of The Slave Ship
"In this remarkable book, Seth Rockman shows how close attention to the circulation of material goods related to slavery--agricultural implements, clothing supplied to slaves by their owners, whips, and the like--sheds new light on the complex economic connections between northern manufacturers and southern purchasers. Rockman reminds us of the central role played by slavery in the evolution of American capitalism, and how the hope of liberating slaves' purchasing power contributed to abolition." --Eric Foner, author of The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery "Plantation Goods is the most satisfying history of commodities and one of the most multidimensional histories of slavery I have ever read, embracing as it does consumers, workers, and manufacturers. Critics of the 'slavery's capitalism' framework have sometimes asked, what about the northern economy? Here is the answer, and so much more. Bold yet careful, precise, and thoughtful, Rockman shucks off overreach and sensationalism to deliver the goods."
--David Waldstreicher, author of Slavery's Constitution and The Odyssey of Phillis Wheatley
"Beautifully written, incredibly researched, and shows us a single, entwined economy north and south-- "Scholarly Kitchen, Best Books of 2024"
"Rather than casting the antebellum US as a region of slave interests and a region of freedom, this narrative is focused on the material interests that united them. Ideologically they opposed each other, but the project of national economic unification based on regional specialisms was a success. Together, the regions accepted that slavery provided them with a way to climb out of Britain's shadow until they were strong enough to argue that they were now enslaved to each other."-- "Times Literary Supplement"