Academic contributions Williams specialised in the study of
slavery. Many Western academics focused on his chapter on the abolition of the
slave trade, but that is just a small part of his work. In his 1944 book,
Capitalism and Slavery, Williams argued that the
British government's passage of the
Slave Trade Act in 1807 was motivated primarily by economic concerns rather than by
humanitarian ones. Williams also argued that by extension, so was the emancipation of the slaves and the
blockade of Africa, and that as industrial capitalism and wage labour began to expand, eliminating the competition from wage-free slavery became economically advantageous. Williams' impact on that field of study has proved of lasting significance. As Barbara Solow and
Stanley Engerman put it in the preface to a compilation of essays on Williams that was based on a commemorative symposium held in Italy in 1984, Williams "defined the study of Caribbean history, and its writing affected the course of Caribbean history.... Scholars may disagree on his ideas, but they remain the starting point of discussion.... Any conference on British capitalism and Caribbean slavery is a conference on Eric Williams." In an open letter to Solow,
Yale Professor of History
David Brion Davis refers to Williams' thesis of the declining economic viability of slave labour as "undermined by a vast mountain of empirical evidence and has been repudiated by the world’s leading authorities on New World slavery, the transatlantic slave trade, and the
British abolition movement". A major work which was written to refute Eric Williams' thesis was
Seymour Drescher's
Econocide, which argued that when the slave trade was abolished in 1807, Britain's sugar economy was thriving. However, other historians have noted that Drescher ended his study of the economic history of the British West Indies in 1822, and did not address the decline of the British sugar industry (something which was highlighted by Williams) which began in the mid-1820s, and continued until the passage of the
Slavery Abolition Act in 1833. The majority of Eric William's thesis, which addressed the decline of the sugar industry in the 1820s, the passage of the Slavery Abolition Act in 1833, and the sugar equalisation acts of the 1840s, has continued to influence the historiography of the 19th-century West Indies and its connection to the wider
Atlantic world as a whole. In addition to
Capitalism and Slavery, Williams produced a number of other scholarly works focused on the Caribbean. Of particular significance are two published long after he had abandoned his academic career for public life:
British Historians and the West Indies and
From Columbus to Castro. The former, based on research done in the 1940s and initially presented at a symposium at
Clark Atlanta University, sought to challenge established British historiography on the West Indies. Williams was particularly scathing in his criticism of the work of Scottish historian
Thomas Carlyle. The latter work is a general history of the Caribbean from the 15th to the mid-20th centuries. The work appeared at the same time as a similarly titled book (
De Cristóbal Colón a Fidel Castro) by another Caribbean scholar-statesman,
Juan Bosch of the
Dominican Republic. Williams sent one of 73
Apollo 11 Goodwill Messages to
NASA for the historic first lunar landing in 1969. The message still rests on the lunar surface today. He wrote, in part: "It is our earnest hope for mankind that while we gain the moon, we shall not lose the world."
The Eric Williams Memorial Collection The
Eric Williams Memorial Collection (EWMC) at the
University of the West Indies in Trinidad and Tobago was inaugurated in 1998 by former
US Secretary of State Colin Powell. In 1999, it was named to
UNESCO's prestigious
Memory of the World Register. Secretary Powell heralded Williams as a tireless warrior in the battle against colonialism, and for his many other achievements as a scholar, politician and international statesman. The Collection consists of the late Dr. Williams' Library and Archives. Available for consultation by researchers, the Collection amply reflects its owner's eclectic interests, comprising some 7,000 volumes, as well as correspondence, speeches, manuscripts, historical writings, research notes, conference documents and a miscellany of reports. The Museum contains a wealth of emotive memorabilia of the period and copies of the seven translations of Williams' major work,
Capitalism and Slavery (into Russian, Chinese and Japanese [1968, 2004] among them, and a Korean translation was released in 2006). Photographs depicting various aspects of his life and contribution to the development of Trinidad and Tobago complete this archive, as does a three-dimensional re-creation of Williams' study. Dr Colin Palmer, Dodge Professor of History at
Princeton University, has said: "as a model for similar archival collections in the Caribbean...I remain very impressed by its breadth.... [It] is a national treasure." Palmer's biography of Williams up to 1970,
Eric Williams and the Making of the Modern Caribbean (
University of North Carolina Press, 2008), is dedicated to the Collection.
Film In 2011, to mark the centenary of Williams' birth, Mariel Brown directed the documentary film
Inward Hunger: the Story of Eric Williams, scripted by Alake Pilgrim. ==Selected bibliography==