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Liverpool, England; Accra, Ghana; Charleston, South Carolina. These were the points of the triangle forming the major route of the transatlantic slave trade. And these are the cities that acclaimed author Caryl Phillips explores--physically, historically, psychologically--in this wide-ranging meditation on the legacy of slavery and the impact of the African diaspora on the life of a place and its people.In a brilliantly layered narrative, Phillips combines his own observations with the stories of figures from the past. The experiences of an African trader in nineteenth-century Liverpool are contrasted with Phillips's experience of the city, where, as a Carib-bean black, he is scorned by the city's "native" blacks. His interactions with American Pan-Africanists coming "home" to Ghana (and with those Ghanaians for whom leaving seems the best hope) are paired with the account of a British-trained African minister in eighteenth-century Accra who turned a blind eye to the slave trade flourishing around him. The story of a white judge who disrupted "the natural order" in Charleston by integrating the Democratic primary in 1947 is set against Phillips's search for remnants of the "pest houses" where slaves were "seasoned" be-fore being sold.Phillips weaves these narrative threads together with acute insight and a novelist's grasp of time, place and character. The result is a provocative and unexpected book, at once historically illuminating and profoundly affecting.From the Hardcover edition.
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Book Details
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"On 28 April 1881 a tentative and somewhat frightened young man named John Emmanuel Ocansey boarded a British ship, the SS Mayumba, on the shores of the River Volta in the British territory known as the Gold Coast."
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- Created April 29, 2008
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December 9, 2022 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
October 12, 2020 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
August 14, 2020 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
October 7, 2017 | Edited by MARC Bot | merge duplicate works of 'The Atlantic Sound' |
April 29, 2008 | Created by an anonymous user | Imported from amazon.com record |