Eighteenth-century Jamaica, Britain's largest and most valuable slave-owning colony, relied on a brutal system of slave management to maintain its tenuous social order. Trevor Burnard provides unparalleled insight into Jamaica's vibrant but harsh African and European cultures with a comprehensive examination of the extraordinary diary of plantation owner Thomas Thistlewood. Thistlewood's diary, kept over the course of forty years, describes in graphic detail how white rule over slaves was predicated on the infliction of terror on the bodies and minds of slaves. Thistlewood treated his slaves cruelly even while he relied on them for his livelihood. Along with careful notes on sugar production, Thistlewood maintained detailed records of a sexual life that fully expressed the society's rampant sexual exploitation of slaves. In Burnard's hands, Thistlewood's diary reveals a great deal not only about the man and his slaves but also about the structure and enforcement of power, changing understandings of human rights and freedom, and connections among social class, race, and gender, as well as sex and sexuality, in the plantation system.
Thomas Thistlewood (1721-1786) was a British estate overseer and small landowner in western Jamaica.
When she made her will eight years later, Priscilla Saunders mentioned “considerable sums of money” that she had paid toward her husband's debts “out of my own separate estate and effects.” Married women could also subvert common law ...
Even in adhering to respectable religion , slaves , in the words of Eugene Genovese , were developing a “ most powerful defense against the dehumanization implicit in slavery . ... drawing on a religion that was supposed to ensure their ...
He also explores the tragic consequences for enslaved Africans with chapters devoted to the slave populations and interracial relations. This widely researched book sheds new light on the networks and the culture of imperialism.
Simon P. Newman argues that this exchange stimulated an entirely new system of bound labor.
Dominique Rogers and Stewart R. King, “Housekeepers, Merchants, Rentières: Free Women of Color in the Port Cities of Colonial Saint-Domingue, 1750–90,” in Women ... Douglas Catterall and Jodi Campbell (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 375, 378–79.
By tracing the largely forgotten eighteenth-century migration of elite mixed-race individuals from Jamaica to Great Britain, Children of Uncertain Fortune reinterprets the evolution of British racial ideologies as a matter of negotiating ...
Ranging from Georgia's founding in the 1730s until the American Revolution in the 1770s, Georgia's Frontier Women explores women's changing roles amid the developing demographic, economic, and social circumstances of the colony's settling.
Observer, March 24, 2013. www .jamaicaobserver.com/columns/The-grip-of-corporate power_13918656?profile= &template=PrinterVersion. Spike, Neville. “The Oligarchy and Privatization.” Gleaner, February 2, 1992. Stirton, Lindsay ...
... at Mount Airy, but didn't stay. And in March 1870 a sizable Alabama contingent arrived unexpectedly: Joe Yeatman (George's brother, sent to Larkin in 1862) with his wife Letty and family, together with Edmund Wright (sent to Alabama ...