Le 07 février 2022 à 23:37:20 :
Le 07 février 2022 à 23:34:47 :
Le 07 février 2022 à 23:29:23 :
Le 07 février 2022 à 23:26:45 :
Le 07 février 2022 à 23:24:00 :
Culture mère des USA = Occident
Multiraciale, quelle importance ? Les minorités n'y sont pour rien ds le succès des USA...
Les minorités exploitées n’y sont pour rien dans le succès des États Unis ?
Les minorités n’ont pas grandement contribué au soft power américain ?
Ne continuent-elles pas de contribuer à son soft power ?
C’est chaud, ce que le racisme vous fait dire comme conneries.
Bah non ce n'est pas le ramassage du coton qui a propulsé les USA en première place.
Joli homme de paille.
Comme si l’exploitation des minorités s’était arrêtée à l’esclavage…
L'écrasante majorité des ouvriers était composée d'européens, pk tu essaies placer tes minorités ?
Woah, la population majoritaire était majoritaire dans toutes les classes sociales.
Étonnant.
From the arrival of Europeans in North America, black workers, enslaved and free, helped build and maintain American cities as well as plantations and farms. They worked primarily as general laborers, household, and domestic servants. They not only helped clear land for both northern and southern cities, but also took a hand in the building and construction of early American cities themselves, including New York, Charleston, and New Orleans.
Enslaved preindustrial black workers and gradually increasing numbers of free people of color not only worked as general laborers, household, and domestic servants, but also as skilled craftsmen and women: carpenters, brick masons, blacksmiths, tailors, and seamstresses, to name a few.
In New Orleans and elsewhere, they built housing frames, plastered walls, and shingled roofs. They also forged the tools that made the barrels that stored sugar, tobacco, and other staple crops. The products were also frequently carried to market in wagons and carts fashioned by the hands of enslave people. Enslaved blacks from Barbados not only helped to build Charleston through their labor and craftsmanship, but also influenced the wrought iron works and aesthetics of the city’s architecture.
Some scholars suggest that late colonial, revolutionary, and early America represented a kind of “golden age” of the black artisan. Slaveholders encouraged enslaved Africans to learn trades. The nation’s leading newspapers regularly advertised for the purchase of enslaved craftsmen and skilled “needle women.” Preindustrial black artisans took pride in their specialized knowledge, expertise, and tools. Before the advent of woodworking machinery of various types, especially planing machines, African-American carpenters performed this work by hand much like their West African kinsmen.