In the ongoing reckoning over race in America, many of the conversations in this moment are forward-focused. While striving for a more equitable future is imperative, can we really move forward without a comprehensive understanding of the history that got us to this moment? Detroit Today host Stephen Henderson spends the hour looking back at the role of African-Americans in the making of America, specifically through the lens of Black American labor. Listen: Labor history scholar and author Joe Trotter explains the interconnectivity between Black labor, capitalism and the creation of America Guest: Joe Trotter Jr. is the Giant Eagle Professor of History and Social Justice at Carnegie Mellon University. He is also the Director and Founder of Carnegie Mellon’s Center for Africanamerican Urban Studies and the Economy (CAUSE). His latest book is titled “Workers on Arrival: Black Labor in the Making of America.” As far as the origins of this book and why Trotter decided that 2019 was the right time for this effort, Trotter explains that he wanted to commemorate that 2019, ”represented 400 years since the landing of African people in Jamestown, it was the symbolic beginnings of African American life in North America.” Trotter explains that contrary to the prevailing beliefs about the disparities in manual unpaid labor falling across racial lines, this isn’t entirely true. “The first enslaved African people were part of a labor system that also included white indentured servants… but by late 1600s early 1700s [that changed].”