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About The Book
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Black Hands White House documents and appraises the role enslaved women and men played in building the US both its physical and its fiscal infrastructure. The book highlights the material commodities produced by enslaved communities during the Transatlantic Slave Trade. These commodities--namely tobacco rice sugar and cotton among others--enriched European and US economies; contributed to the material and monetary wealth of the nations founding fathers other early European immigrants and their descendants; and bolstered the wealth of present-day companies founded during the American slave era. Critical to this study are also examples of enslaved laborers role in building Thomas Jeffersons Monticello and George Washingtons Mount Vernon. Subsequently their labor also constructed the nations capital city Federal City (later renamed Washington DC) its seats of governance--the White House and US Capitol--and other federal sites and memorials.Given the enslaved communitys contribution to the US this work questions the absence of memorials on the National Mall that honor enslaved Black-bodied people. Harrison argues that such monuments are necessary to redress the nations historical disregard of Black people and Americas role in their forced migration violent subjugation and free labor. The erection of monuments commissioned by the US government would publicly demonstrate the governments admission of the USs historical role in slavery and human-harm and acknowledgment of the karmic debt owed to these first Black-bodied builders of America.Black Hands White House appeals to those interested in exploring how nation-building and selective memory American patriotism and hypocrisy racial superiority and mythmaking are embedded in US origins and monuments as well as in other memorials throughout the transatlantic European world. Such a study is necessary as it adds significantly to the burgeoning and in-depth conversation on racial disparity race relations history-making reparations and monument erection and removal.