The Abolition of the Slave Trade 200 Years On


Marking the bicentenary of the abolishment of the transatlantic slave trade, British historian Simon Schama spoke to a full house on the different responses in America and Britain to this historic event. Schama recently authored “Rough Crossings: Britain, the Slaves, and the American Revolution,” which won the 2006 National Book Critics’ Circle Award for general nonfiction. His thirty-plus films for the BBC include the Emmy-nominated “A History of Britain” and the eight-part “Power of Art.” Schama also writes regularly for “The Guardian” and “The New Yorker” and won a National Magazine Award for his art criticism in 1996.

Lecture given on October 29, 2007 at Stanford University

Related posts:

  1. The Cattle Trade of Aberdeenshire in the Nineteenth Century
  2. Tate Britain and University of York create partnership for Art History

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