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  • Format: ePub

Innovation Denied: The Hidden History of Black Invention is a revelatory exploration of how Black innovators helped shape America-while being systematically excluded from recognition, wealth, and legacy.
From the cotton fields of the 18th century to today's billion-dollar tech empires, African American inventors have continually created, transformed, and inspired. Yet their contributions were too often erased, stolen, or buried beneath systemic racism. This powerful work uncovers a hidden legacy of innovation stifled by slavery, exclusion, and a patent system designed to leave Black…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
Innovation Denied: The Hidden History of Black Invention is a revelatory exploration of how Black innovators helped shape America-while being systematically excluded from recognition, wealth, and legacy.

From the cotton fields of the 18th century to today's billion-dollar tech empires, African American inventors have continually created, transformed, and inspired. Yet their contributions were too often erased, stolen, or buried beneath systemic racism. This powerful work uncovers a hidden legacy of innovation stifled by slavery, exclusion, and a patent system designed to leave Black Americans behind.

Beginning with the Clovis people and early American inventions, the book examines how the U.S. patent system-established even before the Constitution-explicitly excluded enslaved individuals. In 1857, the U.S. Patent Office declared enslaved people ineligible for patents. White enslavers frequently filed for inventions not their own, enriching themselves while denying Black inventors credit or compensation.

The story of Ned, an enslaved man who invented a revolutionary cotton scraper, exemplifies this injustice. Though denied legal rights, his design was widely adopted-ironically used to support abolitionist claims of Black ingenuity.

Today, patents remain among the most powerful tools for building wealth, particularly in tech. Yet Black Americans are vastly underrepresented in this arena. While figures like Beyoncé and Jay-Z have mastered branding and copyright, the world of patents-which drives innovation and venture capital-is still difficult to access. This disparity is no accident; it's the result of centuries of exclusion.

Innovation Denied explores the lives and legacies of pioneers like Norbert Rillieux, Jan Matzeliger, Benjamin Montgomery, and Madame C.J. Walker-figures who changed industries but rarely reaped the rewards. It also honors those who defied the odds, like Benjamin Banneker and James Forten, while spotlighting the obstacles modern Black inventors still face.

Through rich historical research and contemporary insight, this book links past injustice with present inequality. The cost of exclusion is staggering: if marginalized groups had been allowed to innovate freely, America might have had four times as many inventors. That's not just a loss for Black Americans-it's a theft from the entire nation.

More than a historical account, Innovation Denied is a call to action. It challenges readers to rethink who gets to invent, who profits, and how we can build a more inclusive future of innovation.

Essential reading for those interested in history, social justice, economics, and STEM, this book belongs in classrooms, libraries, and collections committed to truth and equity.


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