Napoleon Series Archive 2017

Afro-American Organization in the Revolution

A Common Wind: Afro-American Organization in the Revolution Against Slavery
Julius Scott
Paperback: 368 pages
Publisher: Verso (November 6, 2018)
ISBN-13: 9781788732475

A remarkable intellectual history of the slave revolts that made the modern revolutionary era

Out of the grey expanse of official records in Spanish, English and French, The Common Wind provides a gripping and colorful account of inter-continental communication networks that tied together the free and enslaved masses of the new world. A powerful "history from below," this book follows those "rumors of emancipation" and the people who spread them, bringing to life the protagonists in the revolution against slavery.

Though it's been said that The Common Wind is "the most original dissertation ever written," and is credited for having "opened up the Black Atlantic with a rigor and a commitment to the power of written words," the PhD project has remained unpublished for thirty-two years, since it's completion at Duke University in 1986. Now, after decades of achieving wide acclaim by leading historians of slavery and the new world, it will finally be released by Verso for the first time, with a foreword from Marcus Rediker.

Authors

Julius Scott III is a professor of AfroAmerican and African Studies at the University of Michigan.

Marcus Rediker is Distinguished Professor of Atlantic History at the University of Pittsburgh and Senior Research Fellow at the Collège d'études mondiales in Paris. He is the author of numerous prize-winning books, including The Many-Headed Hydra (with Peter Linebaugh), The Slave Ship, and The Amistad Rebellion. He produced the award-winning documentary film Ghosts of Amistad, about the popular memory of the Amistad rebellion of 1839 in contemporary Sierra Leone.