Assessing a unique collection of more than eighty images, this
innovative study of visual culture reveals the productive
organization of plantation landscapes in the nineteenth-century
Atlantic world. These landscapes—from cotton fields in the Lower
Mississippi Valley to sugar plantations in western Cuba and coffee
plantations in Brazil's Paraiba Valley—demonstrate how the
restructuring of the capitalist world economy led to the formation
of new zones of commodity production. By extension, these
environments radically transformed slave labor and the role such
labor played in the expansion of the global economy.
Artists and mapmakers documented in surprising detail how the
physical organization of the landscape itself made possible the
increased exploitation of enslaved labor. Reading these images
today, one sees how technologies combined with evolving conceptions
of plantation management that reduced enslaved workers to black
bodies. Planter control of enslaved people's lives and labor
maximized the production of each crop in a calculated system of
production. Nature, too, was affected: the massive increase in the
scale of production and new systems of cultivation increased the
land's output. Responding to world economic conditions, the
replication of slave-based commodity production became integral to
the creation of mass markets for cotton, sugar, and coffee, which
remain at the center of contemporary life.