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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Lawrence Aje (Montpellier University, France) , Dr Catherine Armstrong (Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Weight: 0.535kg ISBN: 9781350071421ISBN 10: 1350071420 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 14 November 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Language: English Table of ContentsList of Figures List of Tables List of Contributors Introduction, Lawrence Aje (Montpellier University, France) and Catherine Armstrong (Loughborough University, UK) Section I - Documenting non-traditional slavery and slaveholding in archival and archaeological records 1. Many Faces of Slaveholding Sephardim, Seymour Drescher (University of Pittsburgh, USA) 2. Something Close to Freedom: The Case of the Black Seminoles in Florida, Brent R. Weisman (University of South Florida, USA) 3. ‘Adventure in a Wigwam:’ Henry Bibb’s Account of Slavery among the Cherokees in Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb, An American Slave (1849), Sandrine Ferré-Rode (University of Versailles, France) 4. To ‘make a good Mistress to my servants’: unmasking the meaning of maternalism in colonial South Carolina, Inge Dornan (Brunel University, UK) 5. Resident Female Slaveholders in Jamaica at the End of Emancipation: Evidence from the Compensation Claims, Ahmed Reid (City University of New York, USA) Section II - The Politics and Economics of Non-traditional Slavery and Slaveholding 6. Corporate Slavery in Seventeenth-Century New York, Anne-Claire Faucquez (University of Paris 8, France) 7. Militarized slavery: the creation of the West India Regiments, Tim Lockley (University of Warwick, UK) 8. ‘A question between hiring and selling’: Slave Leasing at Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello, 1780 -1830, Christa Dierksheide (University of Missouri, USA) 9. Turmoil in the Cocoa Groves: slave revolts in Ocumare de la Costa,Venezuela, 1837 and 1845, Nikita Harwich (University of Paris Nanterre, France) Section III - Social mobility on the margins of slavery and freedom 10. Keeper of the Keys: Creole Management of a Nineteenth-Century French Plantation in New Orleans, Nathalie Dessens (University of Toulouse-Jean Jaurès, France) 11. João de Oliveira’s Atlantic World: Mobility and Dislocation in Eighteenth- Century Brazil and the Bight of Benin, Mary Hicks (Amherst College, USA) 12. Gilbert Hunt, the City Blacksmith: slavery, freedom, and fame in antebellum Richmond, Virginia, Elizabeth Kuebler-Wolf (University of Saint Francis, USA) 13. Nominal Slavery, Free People of Colour, and Enslavement Requests: Slavery and Freedom at the ‘edges’ of the regime, Emily West (University of Reading, UK) 14. The Transition from Plantation Slave Labour to Free Labour in the Americas, Herbert S. Klein (Columbia University, USA) IndexReviewsThis volume brings together a wealth of case studies that break apart common stereotypes about slavery. Together, these works challenge how we imagine the roles of race, class, geography and economics in defining both slavery and freedom. * Rebecca Shumway, Assistant Professor of History, College of Charleston, USA * Specialists will no doubt benefit from a discussion and debate over Klein's model and its various permutations upon emancipation. The short studies and clear presentation of methodology in the other essays of The Many Faces of Slavery enable the volume to serve as good introductory reading for undergraduate students. * H-Slavery * This volume brings together a wealth of case studies that break apart common stereotypes about slavery. Together, these works challenge how we imagine the roles of race, class, geography and economics in defining both slavery and freedom. * Rebecca Shumway, Assistant Professor of History, College of Charleston, USA * Author InformationLawrence Aje is Associate Professor of United States History at Paul-Valéry, Montpellier, France. Catherine Armstrong is Senior Lecturer in American History at Loughborough University, UK. She is the author of Writing North America in the Seventeenth Century (2007) and, along with Laura M. Chmielewski, The Atlantic Experience: People, Places, Ideas (2013). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |