Human Resources
Broccoli Productions
Exploring the true story of British involvement in the transatlantic slave trade and how it touches every part of the nation. Hosted by Moya Lothian-McLean, a journalist and descendent of both Black African Slaves and White slave owners or overseers.
In Conversation with Kris Manjapra
Moya and Kris Manjapra discuss his book Black Ghost of Empire, a revelatory historical indictment of the long afterlife of slavery in the Atlantic world. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A Free Town
As abolitionist campaigns gained traction in the late 1700s, the population of formerly enslaved people grew. Those who had been enslaved in the British colonies were ‘freed’ - at first in dribs and drabs, then all at once via two landmark pieces of legislation in 1807 and 1834.
But a new question arose: what would the formerly enslaved do with their freedom?
Featuring historian and researcher, Melissa Bennett and Iyamide Thomas, NHS Engagement Lead, Sickle Cell Society, together they
Think of the Children
At the height of the British slave trade, there were no cameras to capture the experiences of the children who found themselves forced into enslavement. There are not even exact numbers for how many youths were sucked into the system - estimates suggest a quarter of the roughly 12 million Black Africans enslaved between the 16th and 19th centuries would be categorised as children. Their stories are some of the hardest to dig up - but people are persisting anyway.
Featuring Christine Wh
Abolition, Now part 2
In the last episode, ‘Abolition, Now part 1’, I was talking with Historian Diana Patton about the real timeline of Aboliton and what Abolition really meant for those previously enslaved. Towards the end of the episode we began speaking about Apprenticeships and how those previously enslaved were then forced to work for the people who formerly owned them. Should they not want to work, the punishments were fast and brutal. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoi
Abolition, Now part 1
Most people know the basics of this moment. Josiah Wedgewood made some pottery, William Wilberforce made some speeches, John Newton wrote Amazing Grace, and boom! Britain’s narrative arc of national moral redemption was complete and slavery was abolished. Or at least – that’s what we’re told.
Featuring Historian of the Caribbean, Diana Paton. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A Tale of Two Pews
In southwest London, there is an area that plays an outsized role in British history. Today, if you walk through Clapham, you will be greeted by formerly grand black and white manor houses, now playing home to the likes of popular coffee chains. So why are we in the verdant, growing suburb of Clapham today? To examine the congregation of a particular site of religious worship, the Holy Trinity Church.
Featuring Dr. Katie Donnington, senior lecturer in Black Caribbean and African history at th
The Colony's Colony
Like Scotland, Ireland was another notch on England’s colonial bedpost, ruled from England continuously since the Tudors re-established the Kingdom of Ireland in the 16th century and made sure it was subordinate to English political authority.
But this isn’t a podcast about what England did to Ireland – many of those exist and tell the story far better than I could. This is a podcast about Britain's slaving past.
Featuring researcher Giselle Gonzalez Garcia. Learn more about your ad
Introducing Physical Capital: Swimming
Why do we swim?
It’s not new, we’ve been swimming for 10,000 years… apparently. But why? We don’t live in the water and so what draws us to it? In this first episode of the podcast we explore the history of humans in the water to get an idea of why we do it.
Hosted by Rebecca Achieng Ajulu-Bushell.
Featuring Bonnie Tsui, Why We Swim
Listen to the full series here Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In The Ring
I love fitness. I love sports. I go to the gym, I walk, I run, I cycle. In my youth, I played team games. And everyone said I was good at sports because of my heritage. My Jamaican ancestry. As a child, this confused me - my white British mother was as sporty as my father, representing her county at tennis in her teen years. But my sporting ability - which is enthusiastic rather than particularly gifted - is always attributed to the half of me that’s Black. It feels - and I’ll just say
Everyday People
In this episode we’re venturing onto the bustling city streets of 18 century London, trying to uncover the traces of the Black individuals who became part of the working class communities – and sometimes elite society – of the British capital, the seat of power that directed the trade that has usually brought them to these shores in the first place.
Featuring PhD researcher at the University of Birmingham, Montaz Marché. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoi
In Absentia
In the last episode, we looked at the women in Jamaica who owned slaves, both British colonists and the formerly enslaved women who codified their freedom through subjugating others.
But there were also the women who didn’t stay, ones who never set foot in Britain’s slave colonies – the absentee owners.
Featuring historian Dr. Hannah Young, who specialises in gender and absentee slave ownership. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
GIRLBOSSES
Women made up 40% of slaveowners across the Caribbean – and although historians have had to dig even harder to pull together a picture of their lives, it’s out there.
Featuring Assistant Professor of Atlantic World History at Yale and US College in Singapore and author of Jamaica Ladies, Christine Walker Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Dis-carded
At the centre of the system of chattel slavery, was the body. Not the mind, not the soul but the physical vessel necessary to carry out backbreaking labour. And break backs it did...
Featuring historian of the Caribbean and the Atlantic, Stephanie Hunt Kennedy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Hippocrits
The Hippocratic Oath isn’t universal. But in the 18th century, the Oath began to be more widely used in medical schools across the British Empire and Europe. The Enlightenment was pushing medical developments along at a fast lick. But concurrently, chattel slavery was in full swing. And a dividing line quickly emerged, between who doctors saw as ‘patients’ and who they viewed as ‘guinea pigs’.
Featuring Anna Arabindan-Kesson, an assistant professor at Princeton University in African Am
Inventing Race
Human civilization only began about 6,000 years ago. As author Emma Dabiri writes in her 2021 book, cheekily titled ‘What White People Can Do Next’, in the grand scheme of things, human beings are babies. A speck on the face of time and space. The thought puts into perspective how *new*, parts of society are, that seem entrenched from day dot: religion. Gender… Race.
Featuring writer and historian Subhadra Das.
Written by Moya Lothian MacLean
Editor and Producer - Renay Richardson
Res
Winners and Losers
We’re back to a well-trodden theme: following the money to understand how Scotland’s national development was shaped by the slave trade – and who the winners and losers were among the people who were trying to profit from enslavement.
Featuring; Alison Clark, a PhD candidate at Edinburgh University and Lisa Willaims who runs the Edinburgh Caribbean Association and leads walking walks uncovering the stories of enslavement linked with built heritage
Full episode transcript available here.
Bairns
In the first of our episodes spotlighting Scotland’s slaving history, we went big and broad. Now it’s time to get personal, to uncover the individual stories which, pieced together, can paint a picture of how the lives of Scottish migrants and enslaved Africans collided.
Featuring Desha Osborne who teaches Literature in the department of Africana, Puerto Rican, and Latino Studies at Hunter College.
The full episode transcript can be found here.
CREDITS
Written and Hosted by Moya Lothi
Taking the High Ground
When we talk about the ‘British’ Empire and the ‘British’ slave trade, it’s easy to forget that England – although the central seat of power – was not the only country involved. And for the next three episodes, we’re going to turn our attentions to one of the nations that has all-too-often escaped the full scrutiny of its role in the wider system of slavery: bonnie Scotland itself.
Featuring Dr. Karly Kehoe the Canada Research Chair in Atlantic Canada communities at St. Mary's Universit
Origin Stories part 2
In part 1 of Origin Stories, we explored the dominant narratives around the beginning of the transatlantic slave trade. But within every accepted history are a multitude of stories, interpretations, and conflicting ‘truths’. In this episode, we try to understand how the origins of slavery are explained from the perspective of those who were enslaved.
Featuring Dr. Jose Lingna Nafafe and Professor Toby Green.
Full episode transcript available here.
CREDITS
Writer and Host Moya Lothia
Origin Stories part 1
Before the 400-odd years of the triangular trade, the plantations, the whips, the Sunday markets, the racial science. What were the first stirrings of an industry that we now understand as the pinnacle of inhumanity, but in the 1600s seemed the height of financial innovation?
Featuring PHD candidate Patricia Martins Marcos.
The full episode transcript can be found here.
CREDITS
Written and hosted by Moya Lothian-McLean
Editor and Producer is Renay Richardson
Researchers are Arisa Loom
In The Middle
The journey of the Middle Passage is one of the most evocative images of slavery, taught in schools as an example of brutality. It was the sea voyage of no return. In this episode, we discover the realities of this horrific journey and what legacies we still live with.
Featuring Sowande Mustakeem, Associate Professor of History and African and African American Studies at Washington University in St. Louis. This episode also features music from Slavery At Sea: The Book Soundtrack by Sow
All Aboard
When Britain’s railways are placed within the context of the empire they helped to maintain, they are framed as one of the only ‘good’ legacies of imperialism. In this episode, we focus on the original Great Western Railway and how it's linked to history within the British slave trade.
Featuring Dr. Oli Betts, research lead at the National Railway Museum in York.
The full episode transcript can be found here.
CREDIT
Written by Moya Lothian-McLean
Editor and Producer Renay Richardson
Right of Way
The image of ‘England’s green and pleasant land’ is one that has endured for centuries, but is this land really for everyone?
Featuring PHD Student Annabelle Gilmore and Maxwell Ayamber PHD Student and founder and Project Coordinator of Sheffield Environmental Movement.
The full episode transcript can be found here.
CREDIT:
Written by Moya Lothian-McLean
Editor and Producer Renay Richardson
Researchers Dr. Alison Bennett and Arisa Loomba
Production Assistant is Rory Boyle
Sound Desi
Royally Flush part 2
Did the Slave rebellions play a part in the British Monarchy's stance on abolition?Featuring author and associate professor of History at Virginia Commonwealth University, Brooke Newman.The full episode transcript can be found here.CREDITSWritten and hosted by Moya Lothian-McLeanEditor and Producer is Renay RichardsonResearchers are Arisa Loomba and Dr. Alison BennettProduction Assistant is Rory BoyleSound Design by Lex AdimoraSocial Assets by /Forward SlashThis is a Broccoli Production
Royally Flush part 1
The British monarchy is one of the oldest and most resilient in the world. In this episode, we explore their links with the slave trade and just how involved they were.
Featuring author and associate professor of history at Virginia Commonwealth University, Brooke Newman.
The transcript for this episode can be found here.
CREDITS
Written and Hosted by Moya Lothian-McLean
Editor and Producer Renay Richardson
Researchers Arisa Loomba and Dr. Alison Bennett
Production Assistant Rory Boyl
Introducing: We Were Always Here
Have you been missing Human Resources? Us too! Our new series will be coming soon but if you're looking for a podcast in the meantime, we think you'll really love We Were Always Here.
Our new weekly documentary series explores the history of the UK AIDS pandemic from the perspective of those most marginalized communities. These are stories of loss, activism, rage and resilience, and most importantly - community. Hosted by HIV activist and sexual health worker Marc Thompson
Give it a
Dirty Money
In the final episode of the season, we focus in on the UK's financial centre, the Bank of England, and how one of the bank's governers was tied up with the Slave trade.
Featuring Professor Trevor Barnard
Full Episode Transcript
Produced by Renay Richardson
Researchers are Dr Alison Bennett and Arisa Loomba
Sound design by Ben Yellowitz
Production assistant is Rory Boyle
This is a Broccoli Production. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Woolly Morals part 2
Following on from part 1, we now look at Welsh Cloth's journey into the Caribbean and learn more about the enslaved people who wore it.
Featuring fabric specialist Jenny Hodgeman and Dr. Steeve O. Buckman.
Full Episode Transcript
CREDITS
Produced by Renay Richardson
Researchers are Dr. Alison Bennett and Arisa Loomba
Sound Design by Ben Yellowitz, with J Hope on the strings
Vocal pieces by James Collins and Caleb Kunle
Flute by Sian Herbert
Our production assistant is Rory Boyle
Th
The Pubs Are Open!
Can the Greene King pub chain and its founder Benjamin Greene help us understand the rise of Britain's pub culture and its links with the Transatlantic Slave Trade?
Featuring author Vaughn Scribner (https://twitter.com/vaughnscribner) from the University of Arkansas and Liverpool's International Slavery Museum's Dr. Richard Benjamin (https://twitter.com/drrpbenjamin).
Greene King founding story (https://www.greeneking.co.uk/our-company/our-history/)
Greene King and International Slav
City with a Slaving Past
Liverpool is a city that appears to be leading the way with how it is reconciling its history. In this episode, we look at what we can learn from Liverpool and where work still needs to be done.
Featuring Dr. Richard Benjamin (https://twitter.com/DrRPBenjamin), head of Liverpool's Internation Slavery Museum (https://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/visit)
Full Episode Transcript (shorturl.at/mHM38)
CREDITS
Produced by Renay Richardson
Researchers are Dr. Alison Bennett and Arisa Loomba
S
Woolly Morals part 1
The picturesque County of Powys in Wales, had an abstruse but vital role in the Slave trade. We uncover how everyday families got swept up in the business and production of Welsh Cloth, a cloth used to not only clothe enslaved people but also trade them.
⚠️ Content Warning: This episode contains descriptions of brutality, listener discretion advised.
Featuring Dr. Marian Gwynn (https://www.mariangwyn.com/)
Full episode transcript (shorturl.at/cBDNW)
CREDITS
Produced by Renay Richards
A Sour Taste
For some, chocolate can provide a pure moment of escapism, for others, it's a luxurious treat. But how is one of Britain's best-known brands; 'Cadbury's, connected to Britain's slaving past, and is chocolate really so sweet?
This episode features chocolate historian Craig Methven from Brixton's Chocolate Museum (https://www.thechocolatemuseum.co.uk/) and Tony's Chocolonely's Choco Evangelist Ynzo van Zanten (https://twitter.com/ynzo).
Full episode transcript (shorturl.at/gyJ12)
Tony's
Lords of the Manor
How is Drayton Manor Theme Park in Staffordshire, the Metropolitan Police, and the modern Conservative party connected? Sir Robert Peel Jr, that's how, and in this episode, we explore the links between powerful men, country manors, and wealth built from Slavery.
This episode features Dr. Madge Dresser (https://twitter.com/madgedresser) and Dr. Sami Pinarbasi (https://twitter.com/Sami_Historian)
An Update from Sami Pinarbasi (shorturl.at/oxBC8)
The Peelian Principles (shorturl.at/qGRS0
The Tree of Life
In Woolsthorpe-by-Colsterworth near Grantham, Lincolnshire is a house, Woolsthorpe Manor and within the grounds of this house, an apple tree. The very tree a young Sir Isaac Newton sat under which started his exploration of gravity. We discover how one of England's greatest minds, science, and Lincolnshire is linked to Britain's slaving past.
Featuring Professor Simon Schaffer and Professor Kate Murphy.
A transcript for this episode is available here (shorturl.at/fqwCN).
CREDITS
Writ
Where there's a Will, there's a Way
We begin our journey in Herefordshire. Kington, specifically, to discover the story behind Lady Hawkins' School and its links to Sir John Hawkins, Britain's first slave trader.
Featuring Dr. Mirander Kaufmann (http://www.mirandakaufmann.com) and Dr. Misha Ewen (https://www.mishaewen.com).
A school with a slaving past (shorturl.at/EHUZ8)
A transcript for this episode is available here (shorturl.at/wCKTW).
CREDITS
Written by Moya Lothian-McLean
Produced by Renay Richardson
Researchers
Human Resources Trailer
A new series exploring Britain's modern day links to the transatlantic slave trade, hosted by Moya Lothian-McLean. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices