When Jefferson acquired the Louisiana Territory, he
envisioned an "empire for liberty" populated by
self-sufficient white farmers. Cleared of Native
Americans and the remnants of European empires by Andrew
Jackson, the Mississippi Valley was transformed instead
into a booming capitalist economy commanded by wealthy
planters, powered by steam engines, and dependent on the
coerced labor of slaves. River of Dark Dreams places the
Cotton Kingdom at the center of worldwide webs of
exchange and exploitation that extended across oceans
and drove an insatiable hunger for new lands. This bold
reaccounting dramatically alters our understanding of
American slavery and its role in U.S. expansionism,
global capitalism, and the upcoming Civil War. Walter
Johnson deftly traces the connections between the
planters' pro-slavery ideology, Atlantic commodity
markets, and Southern schemes for global ascendency.
Using slave narratives, popular literature, legal
records, and personal correspondence, he recreates the
harrowing details of daily life under cotton's dark
dominion. We meet the confidence men and gamblers who
made the Valley shimmer with promise, the slave dealers,
steamboat captains, and merchants who supplied the
markets, the planters who wrung their civilization out
of the minds and bodies of their human property, and the
true believers who threatened the Union by trying to
expand the Cotton Kingdom on a global scale. But at the
center of the story Johnson tells are the enslaved
people who pulled down the forests, planted the fields,
picked the cotton--who labored, suffered, and resisted
on the dark underside of the American dream.
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