On the Plantation
Author : Joel Chandler Harris
Publisher :
Page : 270 pages
File Size : 29,80 MB
Release : 1892
Category : African Americans
ISBN :
Author : Joel Chandler Harris
Publisher :
Page : 270 pages
File Size : 29,80 MB
Release : 1892
Category : African Americans
ISBN :
Author : Clarence Mason Weaver
Publisher : Reeder Publishing
Page : 204 pages
File Size : 31,23 MB
Release : 1998
Category : History
ISBN :
"This book discusses some of the family and environmental contributions that led to my change from liberal to conservative. It also discusses how Black Americans came from slavery to freedom [and] ... examines the 'Plantation mentality' that still plagues us today."--Preface, p. i.
Author : Elizabeth Fox-Genovese
Publisher : UNC Press Books
Page : 565 pages
File Size : 48,11 MB
Release : 2000-11-09
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0807864226
Documenting the difficult class relations between women slaveholders and slave women, this study shows how class and race as well as gender shaped women's experiences and determined their identities. Drawing upon massive research in diaries, letters, memoirs, and oral histories, the author argues that the lives of antebellum southern women, enslaved and free, differed fundamentally from those of northern women and that it is not possible to understand antebellum southern women by applying models derived from New England sources.
Author : John Hope Franklin
Publisher : OUP USA
Page : 480 pages
File Size : 40,1 MB
Release : 2000-07-20
Category : History
ISBN : 9780195084511
This bold and precedent-setting study details numerous slave rebellions against white masters, drawn from planters' records, government petitions, newspapers, and other documents. The reactions of white slave owners are also documented. 15 halftones.
Author : Gwen Bergner
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 46,29 MB
Release : 2019-08-22
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781478005186
This special issue interrogates the plantation as a form, logic, and technology that continues to produce inequalities. Attending to the Caribbean, Latin America, and the United States, contributors follow the evolution of plantation slavery in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries through its subsequent iterations in the Jim Crow and civil rights eras, and into the neoliberal present, where the carceral state props up fantasies of postracialism. The contributors rethink the necro- and biopolitics of plantation slavery, uncovering laborers' strategies of self-determination, affiliation, and communication in spite of the plantation's mechanisms of control. Essay topics include the circulation of a weekly newspaper published by black tenant farmers in the 1920s, a nineteenth-century trial of an enslaved woman, and the fetish-making of Haitian revolutionary Fran ois Makandal. Reconsidering the time and space of the plantation, contributors analyze Western processes of racialization and uncover the experience and agency of the oppressed. This search for modes of being within the plantation structure offers one way to rewrite histories of slavery. Contributors. Monique Allewaert, Gwen Bergner, Benjamin Child, Jeannine Marie DeLombard, Julius B. Fleming Jr., Jarvis C. McInnis, Zita Nunes, Roberta Wolfson
Author : Angela D. Mack
Publisher : Univ of South Carolina Press
Page : 188 pages
File Size : 32,93 MB
Release : 2008
Category : Art
ISBN : 9781570037207
Through eighty-nine color plates and six thematic essays, this collection examines depictions of plantations, plantation views, and related slave imagery in the context of the history of landscape painting in America, while addressing the impact of these images on US race relations.
Author : Dale W. Tomich
Publisher : UNC Press Books
Page : 176 pages
File Size : 40,4 MB
Release : 2021-03-19
Category : History
ISBN : 1469663139
Assessing a unique collection of more than eighty images, this innovative study of visual culture reveals the productive organization of plantation landscapes in the nineteenth-century Atlantic world. These landscapes—from cotton fields in the Lower Mississippi Valley to sugar plantations in western Cuba and coffee plantations in Brazil's Paraiba Valley—demonstrate how the restructuring of the capitalist world economy led to the formation of new zones of commodity production. By extension, these environments radically transformed slave labor and the role such labor played in the expansion of the global economy. Artists and mapmakers documented in surprising detail how the physical organization of the landscape itself made possible the increased exploitation of enslaved labor. Reading these images today, one sees how technologies combined with evolving conceptions of plantation management that reduced enslaved workers to black bodies. Planter control of enslaved people's lives and labor maximized the production of each crop in a calculated system of production. Nature, too, was affected: the massive increase in the scale of production and new systems of cultivation increased the land's output. Responding to world economic conditions, the replication of slave-based commodity production became integral to the creation of mass markets for cotton, sugar, and coffee, which remain at the center of contemporary life.
Author : Fanny Kemble
Publisher :
Page : 360 pages
File Size : 29,76 MB
Release : 1864
Category : Georgia
ISBN :
Author : Antoinette T Jackson
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 179 pages
File Size : 47,17 MB
Release : 2016-06-16
Category : History
ISBN : 1315419963
Focusing on the agency of enslaved Africans and their descendants in the South, this work argues for the systematic unveiling and recovery of subjugated knowledge, histories, and cultural practices of those traditionally silenced and overlooked by national heritage projects and national public memories. Jackson uses both ethnographic and ethnohistorical data to show the various ways African Americans actively created and maintained their own heritage and cultural formations. Viewed through the lens of four distinctive plantation sites—including the one on which that the ancestors of First Lady Michelle Obama lived—everyday acts of living, learning, and surviving profoundly challenge the way American heritage has been constructed and represented. A fascinating, critical view of the ways culture, history, social policy, and identity influence heritage sites and the business of heritage research management in public spaces.
Author : Richard S. Dunn
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Page : 553 pages
File Size : 20,25 MB
Release : 2014-11-04
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0674735366
Richard Dunn reconstructs the lives of three generations of slaves on a sugar estate in Jamaica and a plantation in Virginia, to understand the starkly different forms slavery took. Deadly work regimens and rampant disease among Jamaican slaves contrast with population expansion in Virginia leading to the selling of slaves and breakup of families.