Winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in History: a bold and searing investigation into the role of white women in the American slave economy “Stunning.”—Rebecca Onion, Slate “Makes a vital contribution to our understanding of our past and present.”—Parul Sehgal, New York Times “Bracingly revisionist. . . . [A] startling corrective.”—Nicholas Guyatt, New York Review of Books Bridging women’s history, the history of the South, and African American history, this book makes a bold argument about the role of white women in American slavery. Historian Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers draws on a variety of sources to show that slave‑owning women were sophisticated economic actors who directly engaged in and benefited from the South’s slave market. Because women typically inherited more slaves than land, enslaved people were often their primary source of wealth. Not only did white women often refuse to cede ownership of their slaves to their husbands, they employed management techniques that were as effective and brutal as those used by slave‑owning men. White women actively participated in the slave market, profited from it, and used it for economic and social empowerment. By examining the economically entangled lives of enslaved people and slave‑owning women, Jones-Rogers presents a narrative that forces us to rethink the economics and social conventions of slaveholding America.
This book examines the lives of the Antebellum South's underprivileged whites in nineteenth-century America.
Take Frederick Winslow Taylor, founder of the famed system of “scientific management,” discussed in Chapter 3. No history of American management practices fails to linger over Taylor. Slide rule and stopwatch in hand, the Philadelphia ...
138; Lizzie Barnett, Arkansas Narratives, vol. 8, pt. 2, p. 113. On the general phenomenon, see Bauer and Bauer, “Day to Day Resistance.” 43. Fannie Dorum, Arkansas Narratives, vol. 8, pt. 2, p. 181. See also Sophie Word, ...
Life in Black and White provides a panoramic portrait of family and community life in and around Loudoun County, Virginia--weaving the fascinating personal stories of planters and slaves, of free blacks and poor-to-middling whites, into a ...
When Richard Harris died in Carolina in 1711, he provided each of his children with coupled enslaved men and women. His eldest son received land and the house with Pompey, Catharina, and ''her increase.'' His younger daughters each ...
Significantly, this book finds that sexual violence against enslaved black women was a widespread form of oppression used to perform white masculinity and reinforce an intersectional hierarchy.
By placing African American histories and memories of slave breeding within the larger context of America’s history of racial and gender discrimination, Smithers sheds much-needed light on African American collective memory, racialized ...
This is a story of race and gender, nation and citizenship, freedom and bondage in the nineteenth century South; a big abstract story that is composed of equally big personal stories.
Hand Book of Alabama: A Complete Index to the State, with Map. Birmingham: Roberts and Son, 1892. ... Blight, David W. Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory. Cambridge, Mass. ... New York: Simon & Schuster, 2006.
More than twenty years after this celebrated work of narrative nonfiction won the National Book Award and changed the American conversation about race, Slaves in the Family is reissued by FSG Classics, with a new preface by the author.