"The Sociology of Slavery" (1967); "Slavery and Social Death" (1982); Freedom in the Making of Western Culture (1991)
Horace Orlando PattersonOM (born 5 June 1940) is a Jamaican-American historian and sociologist known for his work on the history of
race and
slavery in the
United States and
Jamaica, as well as the sociology of development. He is currently the John Cowles Professor of Sociology at
Harvard University.[1] Patterson's 1991 book Freedom in the Making of Western Culture won the U.S.
National Book Award for Nonfiction.[2]
Early life and education
Horace Orlando Patterson was born on 5 June 1940 in
Westmoreland Parish, Jamaica,[3][4] to Almina Morris and Charles A. Patterson.[5] His parents were strong supporters of Jamaica’s
People National Party, the political party he grew up to serve a few decades later. His father was a local detective while his mother became a seamstress. He had six half-siblings on his father's side but was his mother’s only child.[6] He grew up in
Clarendon Parish in the small town of
May Pen.[7] He attended primary school there, then moved to
Kingston to attend
Kingston College. While attending Kingston College, Patterson won a Jamaica Government Exhibition scholarship in 1958. Before matriculating in 1959, he taught for a year at the Excelsior High School in Jamaica.[6] He went on to earn a BSc in Economics with a concentration in Sociology from the
University of the West Indies,
Mona, in 1962.[8] He served as president of the Economics Society, president of the Literary Society and editor of the student magazine 'the Pelican'.[6] Patterson earned his PhD in sociology at the
London School of Economics in 1965, where he wrote his PhD thesis, the Sociology of Slavery.[9][6] His dissertation adviser was
David Glass.[10] He also wrote for the recently founded New Left Review, his first work being "The Essays of
James Baldwin" in 1964.[11] While in London he was associated with the
Caribbean Artists Movement, whose second meeting, in January 1967, was held at the Pattersons' North London flat.[12]
Career
Earlier in his career, Patterson was concerned with the economic and political development of his home country,
Jamaica. He served as special advisor to
Michael Manley,
Prime Minister of Jamaica, from 1972 to 1979 while serving as a tenured professor at Harvard University. Committed to working both jobs, Patterson split his time between Jamaica and the United States. He often flew to Jamaica the day after his last lecture.[6]
Patterson is best known for his work on the relationship between slavery and
social death, which he has worked on extensively and written several books about. Other contributions include
historical sociology and fictional writing with themes of post-colonialism. Patterson has also spent time analyzing social science's scholarship and ethical considerations.[13]
In October 2015 he received the Gold
Musgrave Medal in recognition of his contribution to literature.[14] In 2020 he was appointed a member of the
Order of Merit, Jamaica's third-highest national honour.[15]
2020:
Order of Merit, Jamaica. "For his highly distinguished international contribution to Academia, West Indian Literature, Sociology, and the Epistemology of Social Culture"[15]
The Sociology of Slavery: Black Society in Jamaica, 1655-1838. 1967; 2022(2nd ed.).
Ethnic Chauvinism: The Reactionary Impulse. 1977.
Slavery and Social Death. 1982.
Freedom in the Making of Western Culture. 1991. Later renamed Freedom, Vol. 1: Freedom in the Making of Western Culture – winner of National Book Award[2]
The Ordeal of Integration. 1997
Rituals of Blood: Consequences of Slavery in Two American Centuries. 1999.
Freedom: Freedom in the Modern World. 2006.
The Cultural Matrix: Understanding Black Youth (with Ethan Fosse). 2015.
The Confounding Island: Jamaica and the Postcolonial Predicament. 2019.
The Sociology of Slavery: Black Society in Jamaica. Wiley, 2022.
The Paradox of Freedom: A Biographical Dialogue (with David Scott) 2023
Patterson, Orlando (2004). "Culture and Continuity: Causal Structures in Socio-Cultural Persistence". In Friedland, Roger; Mohr, John (eds.).
Matters of Culture: Cultural Sociology in Practice(PDF). New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 71–109..
^Rosen, Isaac (1993). "Orlando Patterson 1940–". In Bigelow, Barbara Carlisle (ed.). Contemporary Black Biography. Vol. 4. Detroit:
Gale. pp.
191–194.
ISBN978-1-4144-3543-5.
OCLC527366247.