Cotton and Race-2

Books about American history tend to be either triumphal or highly critical. Gene Dattel’s study of the racial legacy of cotton, America’s leading export up to World War II, is neither. Above all, it is informed, honest, and balanced. Dattel explains insightfully just how slavery and racial discrimination came to plague our nation’s ideals and the promise of American life. Mostly it was a by-product–north and south, east and west–of trying to earn a buck, of pursuing the Almighty Dollar. His book is a gem–one of the finest works on the American national experience to appear in many years.

January 4, 2019

Richard Sylla

Books about American history tend to be either triumphal or highly critical. Gene Dattel’s study of the racial legacy of cotton, America’s leading export up to World War II, is neither. Above all, it is […]
January 3, 2019

H.W. Brands

A fascinating account of an essential aspect of American history. Gene Dattel brings clarity and insight to a subject we’ve long known about but not known well. A model for integrating economic, social, and political […]