'The Smell of Slavery makes important and original contributions to both the history of the senses and studies of racism and resistance in the Atlantic World. Kettler sheds further light on the embodied dimensions of slavery, convincingly tracing across centuries the role of smell in the construction of a racist system of dehumanization, commodification, and segregation, while illuminating the contrasting smellscapes of the oppressed.' Céline Carayon, Salisbury University and author of Eloquence Embodied: Nonverbal Communication among French and Indigenous Peoples in the Americas