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How California Became a 'Slave State'

How California Became a 'Slave State'

We’ll talk with historian Jean Pfaelzer about her new book “California, A Slate State” and how we might reckon with a history that’s far darker than many Californians realize.

KQED's Forum

July 13, 202355m 47s

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Show Notes

More than a decade ago, historian Jean Pfaelzer was shown a photograph of a young Chinese woman, displayed for sale in a caged brothel in San Francisco in the 1870s. The image made Pfaelzer question her own assumptions about California’s claim to have entered the union as a free state and about the force and effect of the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery at the end of the Civil War. Pfaelzer traveled the state for seven years excavating accounts of Black, Indigenous, Asian and immigrant enslavement, concluding that “the story of California is a history of 250 years of uninterrupted human bondage.” We’ll talk to Pfaelzer about her new book “California, A Slate State” and how we might reckon with a history that’s far darker than many Californians realize.

Guests:

Jean Pfaelzer, historian; author, "California, a Slave State"

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