Atlas of the Transatlantic Slave Trade - Winner of the PROSE Award 2010
The R. R. Hawkins Award for Professional and Scholarly Excellence
(PROSE) 2010 of the Association of American Publishers was presented to Yale University Press for Atlas of the Transatlantic Slave Trade by David Eltis and David Richardson. A groundbreaking work, Atlas of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, provides the fullest possible picture of the extent and inhumanity of one of the largest forced migrations in history. The book also won the PROSE Award for Excellence in Reference Works and the Single Volume Reference/Humanities & Social Sciences category.
The prestigious R.R. Hawkins Award recognizes scholarly works in all
disciplines of the humanities and sciences, and is given for the most
outstanding professional, reference or scholarly work among the year's award winners.
The Atlas:
Between 1501 and 1867, the transatlantic slave trade claimed an estimated 12.5 million Africans and involved almost every country with an Atlantic coastline. In this extraordinary book, two leading historians have created the first comprehensive, up-to-date atlas on this 350-year history of kidnapping and coercion. It features nearly 200 maps, especially created for the volume, that explore every detail of the African slave traffic to the New World. The atlas is based on an online database (www.slavevoyages.org) with records on nearly 35,000 slaving voyages - roughly 80 percent of all such voyages ever made. Using maps, David Eltis and David Richardson show which nations participated in the slave trade, where the ships involved were outfitted, where the captives boarded ship, and where they landed in the Americas, as well as the experience of the transatlantic voyage and the geographic dimensions of the eventual abolition of the traffic. Accompanying the maps are illustrations and contemporary literary selections, including poems, letters, and diary entries, intended to enhance readers' understanding of the human story underlying the trade from its inception to its end.
Information:
www.proseawards.com
www.slavevoyages.org
Redaktion (ph)