This Atlantic history of war brings the interconnectedness of Africa, the colonial Americas, and Europe into sharper focus. Generally, Brown's purpose is to bring Africa into focus as an integral part in the development of European Atlantic empires, and to show the way wars for enslavement stretched throughout the Atlantic region to morph into race war on plantations and wars for imperial dominance. These included "an extension of African wars" that continued in the colonies after the forced migration of enslaved people "a race war" as white and black people came into conflict on plantations an internal conflict among black Jamaicans and "one of the hardest-fought battles" of the Seven Years' War (7). Furthermore, he argues that Tacky's revolt in Jamaica was simultaneously part of four conflicts. In Tacky's Revolt, Vincent Brown asserts that slave revolts were "viewed as war" (5).
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