
New Books Network Sandra E. Greene, “Slave Owners of West Africa: Decision Making in the Age of Abolition” (Indiana UP, 2017)
Feb 28, 2026
Sandra E. Greene, Professor of African History and author, explores three 19th-century West African elites who owned slaves. She recounts their different responses to abolition and colonization. Short, vivid biographies reveal tough moral choices, strategies of adaptation, and the local sensitivities around researching slavery.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Studying Slave Owners Complements Slave Narratives
- Sandra E. Greene shifted focus to slave owners to complement earlier work on enslaved peoples and reveal the other side of the institution.
- She used decades of oral interviews and documentary sources from the 1970s onward to build biographical depth for three well-documented men.
Modern Sensitivity Shapes Research On Slave Owners
- Slavery remains highly sensitive in West Africa, affecting descendants' willingness to be identified with slave-owning ancestors.
- Greene notes modern resistance to highlighting slave-owner lineage, complicating heritage projects and local reception.
Amagashie Afeku Resisted Abolition to Protect Status
- Amagashie Afeku was a wealthy Keta businessman who vehemently resisted abolition and even relocated to avoid British reach.
- He prosecuted slave returns, sold slaves despite British suits, and had personal motive tied to his own slave-origin stigma.

