“The history of slavery in Latin America has been very much part of the history of European colonization and the development of American commodities for the European market.”
Anyone who’s read “Open Veins of Latin America” by Eduardo Galeano should read this next. The subtitle of this book could’ve easily been: “How Europe Underdeveloped Latin America.”
This book traces the history of slave labor in mining, sugar, coffee, tobacco, cacao, and cotton, from 16th century to 19th century Latin America & the Caribbean. It also covers resistance and rebellions, family structure, religion, and the abolition of slavery in all of the Americas.
If cotton was king in the U.S., then sugar was queen in Cuba, and coffee was god in Brazil. These commodities fueled European consumption and due to diseases wiping out indigenous folks in the Americas, the settlers imported slaves from Africa to help build Latin America and export these commodities back to Europe.
The Spanish brought African slaves to Colonial Mexico and Peru, then the Portuguese brought them to Brazil, and the Dutch, French, and British brought them to the West Indies.
There is so much to unpack in Latin America and this book gives a thorough layout of one aspect.