Escape to the City: Fugitive Slaves in the Antebellum Urban South
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Reckoning with Slavery: Gender, Kinship, and Capitalism in the Early Black Atlantic
In Reckoning with Slavery Jennifer L. Morgan draws on the lived experiences of enslaved African women in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to reveal the contours of early modern notions of trade…
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They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South
A bold and searing investigation into the role of white women in the American slave economy
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Bridging women’s history, the history of the South, and African American history, this book makes a bold arg… -
The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism
Americans tend to cast slavery as a pre-modern institution—the nation’s original sin, perhaps, but isolated in time and divorced from America’s later success. But to do so robs the millions who suffer…
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Americanah
Ifemelu and Obinze are young and in love when they depart military-ruled Nigeria for the West. Beautiful, self-assured Ifemelu heads for America, where despite her academic success, she is forced to g…
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Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History
Placing the West's failure to acknowledge the most successful slave revolt in history alongside denials of the Holocaust and the debate over the Alamo, Michel-Rolph Trouillot offers a stunning meditat…
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Dispossessed Lives: Enslaved Women, Violence, and the Archive (Early American Studies)
In the eighteenth century, Bridgetown, Barbados, was heavily populated by both enslaved and free women. Marisa J. Fuentes creates a portrait of urban Caribbean slavery in this colonial town from the p…
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The Common Wind: Afro-American Currents in the Age of the Haitian Revolution
A remarkable intellectual history of the slave revolts that made the modern revolutionary era
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The Common Wind is a gripping and colorful account of the intercontinental networks that tied together the … -
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