In 1739 Bordeaux’s Royal Academy of Sciences announced a competition for the best essay on the physical cause of “Black Skin and hair.” Sixteen essays, written in French and Latin, were ultimately dispatched to Europe’s first great “race contest.” The international cast of authors who participated included naturalists, physicians, theologians, and amateur savants. Some of their essays claimed that Africans had fallen from God’s grace; others that blackness had resulted from a brutal climate; several talked about humoral imbalances; one surgeon who had worked on a New World plantation emphasized the anatomical specificity of Africans. Despite their differences, looming behind these essays is the fact that some four million Africans had been kidnapped and shipped across the Atlantic by the time the contest was announced.
These manuscripts have survived the centuries tucked away in Bordeaux’s municipal library. Brought to life by a team of professional translators, and accompanied by a detailed introduction, timeline, and headnotes by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Andrew Curran, each essay included in this volume not only lays bare the origins of anti-Black racism in the West; it provides an indispensable record of the Enlightenment-era thinking that normalized the sale and enslavement of Black human beings. Visit www.whoisblackandwhy.com.