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History of Globalisation Summary

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Publié le
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15/20 - personally made summary of all texts+lectures, includes content from all lecture slides, all compulsory readings, and some additional recommended readings as well, covering 11 classes of course material taught by Prof. Koenraad Bogaert. Table of contents on the document is interact-able; clicking on them brings you to the corresponding content. Topics include the slave ship as a world-changing machine, European colonialism and African underdevelopment, race and global inequality, decolonization movements, and contemporary colonialism. well-organized notes that key readings and theoretical frameworks, ideal for exam preparation and understanding the interconnected history of global capitalism, colonialism, and resistance.

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HISTORY OF
GLOBALISATION
Prof. Koenraad Bogaert
2025-2026

Rahul Siddhartan Rajakumar

,Table of Contents
Class 2 – A World Changing Machine ...................................................................... 2
Class 3 – How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (& the World) ................................... 5
Class 4 – The World According to Race ................................................................... 9
Class 5 – Mobility Injustice – Race and Tourism .................................................... 14
Class 6 – Resistance and Revolution in the Colony ............................................... 18
Class 7 – Black Jacobins and the Black Atlantic .................................................... 23
Class 8 – Concerning Violence ............................................................................. 28
Class 9 – Third Worldism and Its Defeat................................................................ 35
Class 10 – Colonialism Today - Palestine .............................................................. 42
Class 11 – Towards a New World? ......................................................................... 47

,Class 2 – A World Changing Machine

Reading: Marcus Rediker (2007) The Slave Ship. A human history

1. Main Idea

• Slave ships are one of the most central instruments through which the modern global
capitalist world was created
• Slave ship as the “World-Changing Machine”
o Treated as a machine that connected Europe, Africa and the Americas
▪ Through forced movement, violence, trade, racialisation, plantation
labour, capital accumulation
o Slave ship as a factory, machine, prison and system of terror
▪ Plantation complex, triangular trade (Europe-America-Africa),
production of race, primitive accumulation
• Modern world was created through conquest, enslavement, forced transportation, racial
terror and transformation of man into commodity
o World making project was rooted in European colonisation, through connections
between Europe, Africa, Caribbean and the Americas

2. Rediker’s Introduction

• The story of a woman
o To understand the slave ship from the perspective of the people who
experienced it
o Away from treating slave ships as just numbers and economics
▪ Stats alone cannot communicate the lived reality of terror, resistance
and death
• Violence of abstraction
o Balance sheets, graphs and tables make violence appear distant and technical
o “price” hides the social relations behind commodity
▪ Commodity is not just sugar or rice
▪ The hidden reality is the coercive transformation of African people into
enslaved labour
• The Slave Trade
o A massive structural system involving empire, capital, ships, etc.
o Experienced by actual human beings through fear, hunger, confinement,
resistance and death

3. The 4 Human Dramas

• Captain and Crew
o Captain as a violent commander
▪ Controlled sailors and enslaved Africans
o Sailors were poor, badly fed, exposed to disease and subjugated to brutal
discipline
▪ Exploited workers but also agents of violence against the enslaved
o Slave ship was not a simple binary of white freedom and black enslavement
▪ Contained patterns of hierarchy, coercion, class domination and racial
power all at once

, • Soldiers and the enslaved
o Sailors carried out the captain’s orders
▪ Forced captains below deck, feed, whipped and punished them
▪ Helped transformed captives into commodities for the international
labour market
o Rediker’s ‘factory’ argument
▪ Slave ship was not just a mode of transport
▪ It helped produce enslaved people as marketable labour power
• Through violence, confinement, discipline and bodily control
• Between the enslaved themselves
o People of different ethnicities, classes, languages and genders were all forced
together below deck
o But they were not passive victims
▪ They exchanged information, created new forms of communication, built
new bonds (shipmates)
▪ Ship was a space of destruction but also space of emergence of new
forms of identity, kinship and resistance
• Between the slave ship and the abolitionist public opinion
o Abolitionists wanted to show Britain and America the hidden violence of the
slave ship
▪ The Brookes slave ship image
▪ It showed how bodies were packed into the vessel and helped turn the
ship into evidence against slave trade
o The enslaved themselves were the first abolitionists

4. Chapter 1 – Rediker

• Terror on the slave ship was not irrational cruelty alone
o It was economic calculation where violence served the market
o Terror was part of the business model
o The captain preserves valuable human property while using punishment to
discipline everyone else
▪ Captain Tomba who unsuccessfully revolted was kept alive to be sold
profitably, while less valuable captives were killed to show an example
• How are humans capable in engaging in such monstrosities?
o They had moral language, religious justifications, racial ideas, economic
interests and imperial assumptions that allowed reinterpretation of violence as
business, rescue, civilisation or necessity
o William Snelgrave
▪ Imagined himself as a Christian, civilised, human and saviour while
participating in the destruction of African families and plantation slavery
• Slave ship was not exclusive to polite society
o It was connected to finance, politics, empire and respectability
▪ Politicians, bankers and patriots were materially tied to slavery
o Humphrey Morice
▪ London’s leading slave trader in early 18th century
▪ Deeply connected to global trade, finance, parliament and the Bank of
England
o Henry Laurens
▪ Transformed profits from the slave trade into plantations, land, political
office and status

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Publié le
13 juillet 2026
Nombre de pages
54
Écrit en
2025/2026
Type
RESUME
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