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The Food Programme

Food and the legacy of slavery

The Food Programme

BBC

Food, Arts

4.4977 Ratings

🗓️ 16 August 2020

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Jaega Wise and Dan Saladino investigate the hidden story of slavery in our food. Between the 17th century and into the 19th, twelve million enslaved Africans were transported to the Caribbean and into the rest of the Americas. Their work transformed industries, including tobacco and cotton, but it was their agricultural labour that made the biggest impact on the world. The modern food system as we know it would not exist without the centuries of the brutal slavery put in place by European powers. The food we eat today, our palates and even the shapes of our bodies, are all a part of the legacy of slavery. And the biggest commodity of all was sugar.

Jaega and Dan tell this story with the help of James Walvin, a writer and academic who has spent fifty years researching the role of slavery in making the modern world. Walvin argues that we still haven't acknowledged this fact, and to move forward we will need to come to terms with this history. The most tangible part of lives is in what we eat and drink; tea, coffee, chocolate, all were ingredients made possible with slavery and all were bitter products made palatable with the sugar of slavery.

Dan also speaks to Michael Twitty, author of the Cooking Gene, and as an African-American cook, someone who has recreated the lives of enslaved people working in kitchens on plantations.

Produced by Dan Saladino.

Photo by Johnathan M. Lewis

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:19.5

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0:23.0

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0:28.4

podcast.

0:29.4

Newscast, listen on BBC Sounds. BBC Sounds. BBC Sounds, music radio podcasts.

0:38.0

Hello, you've downloaded a podcast of BBC Radio Falls The Food Program. I'm Dan Saladino. Welcome to our world.

0:46.0

From cooking to culture, politics to pleasure. We hope you enjoy this edition.

0:57.0

Hello, I'm Jago Wise. And I'm Dan Saladino.

1:00.0

And you're listening to the Food Program.

1:02.0

The Place for Hungry Minds.

1:03.6

And this edition, Jago?

1:04.7

Well, there's a lot about sugar,

1:06.5

and we're crossing three continents.

1:08.6

And covering 400 years of history?

1:10.8

Because we're going to be telling the story of how food and drink was changed by slavery.

1:16.0

A subject has been reignited by events this summer.

1:20.0

A sweeping global reassessment of history and racism triggered by the death of George Floyd

1:25.4

is forcing major brands and companies to reflect on their own pasts.

...

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