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Published byBritton Barker Modified over 9 years ago
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Aim: What were the Economic Effects of European Colonization in the Americas?
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What was the value of a “blank slate” for the Europeans in the Americas? No traditions to deal with - ordinarily it takes generations to force embittered peasants into factories and make them workers Displaced laborers could be forced into agricultural factories and mines Created a new system of exploitation from scratch – capitalism w/o steam power
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Sugar Production: Origins INDIA 500 CE
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Sugar Production: Too Dry NORTH AFRICA 900 CE
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Sugar Production: Too Cool INDIA 500 CE NORTH AFRICA 90 CE SICILY 1200 CRETE CYPRUS 1200 SPAIN 1300
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Which way to India?
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Sugar Production - Just Right! But no labor force… CANARY ISLANDS CAPE VERDE
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Sugar Production - Just Right! But no labor force… CANARY ISLANDS CAPE VERDE Here It Is!
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Sugar: Where else? Hot and Humid
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Why did the Europeans need African slaves? Why not get (free) European colonists? Why not use indentured servants? African slaves: –Used to tropical climate, used to Eurasian diseases, familiar with sugar as a crop –Only dispossessed labor can be forced into this new form of killing labor
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Plantation slavery as a social system in the Caribbean Mostly practiced in “killing” climates and conditions Huge numbers of slaves :: white settlers
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Sugar as a “Factory” Product: Hoeing for Planting
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Sugar as a “Factory” Product: Harvesting
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Sugar as a “Factory” Product: Gathering the Cane
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Sugar as a “Factory” Product: The Mill
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Sugar as a “Factory” Product: Sugar House
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The juice of the cane is conveyed in pipes from the mill to the boiling house, where it is converted into sugar. Here it is passed through a succession of coppers gradually increasing in heat... At each copper a Negro is placed to take off the scum as it rises, and when the temperature of that vessel has had its full effect, to remove it with a ladle into the next.
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Sugar as a “Factory” product A sugar plantation is a factory Europeans did not invent slavery, but Europe made slaves into factory workers and plantation field hands: “Unfree Laborers” in a capitalist enterprise
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American Silver Production Europe (1535) 3 million ounces Potosi (1540) 1.5 million ounces Potosi (1590) 10 million ounces (+ Mexico)
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America is where Europe “invents” capitalism The accumulation of capital through the super-exploitation of Native Americans and Africans Combining capital with labor starts here Large-scale work-places based on division of labor and a class structure
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