
New Books in History Sandra E. Greene, “Slave Owners of West Africa: Decision Making in the Age of Abolition” (Indiana UP, 2017)
Feb 28, 2026
Sandra E. Greene, a Cornell professor of African history who studies 18th–19th century Ghana and oral history, discusses biographies of three wealthy men who owned dependents and navigated abolition and colonial rule. The conversation covers research methods, why she turned to slave owners, differing strategies these men used, and sensitivities around studying families with slaveholding pasts.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Select Biography Subjects With Consent And Sources
- Choose biographical subjects based on documentary and oral richness and descendant cooperation to ensure ethical, publishable work.
- Greene selected three men because she had extensive sources and ongoing exchanges with families who consented to publication.
Studying Slave Owners Complements Enslaved Narratives
- Sandra E. Greene chose to study slave owners to complement existing narratives from the enslaved and reveal the other side of the institution.
- She framed the book as a flip of her earlier work on West African narratives of slavery, using biographies to compare perspectives on slavery and abolition.
Sensitivity Around Slaveholding In West Africa
- Discussing slavery remains highly sensitive in West Africa; descendants of slave owners often avoid being publicly associated with that past.
- Greene notes heritage projects can provoke resistance because families fear stigma from being linked to slaveholding ancestors.


