Slave against Slave
eBook - ePub

Slave against Slave

Plantation Violence in the Old South

  1. 544 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Slave against Slave

Plantation Violence in the Old South

Book details
Table of contents
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About This Book

In the first-ever comprehensive analysis of violence between slaves in the antebellum South, Jeff Forret challenges persistent notions of slave communities as sites of unwavering harmony and solidarity. Though existing scholarship shows that intraracial black violence did not reach high levels until after Reconstruction, contemporary records bear witness to its regular presence among enslaved populations. Slave against Slave explores the roots of and motivations for such violence and the ways in which slaves, masters, churches, and civil and criminal laws worked to hold it in check. Far from focusing on violence alone, Forret's work also adds depth to our understanding of morality among the enslaved, revealing how slaves sought to prevent violence and punish those who engaged in it.Forret mines a vast array of slave narratives, slaveholders' journals, travelers' accounts, and church and court records from across the South to approximate the prevalence of slave-against-slave violence prior to the Civil War. A diverse range of motives for these conflicts emerges, from tensions over status differences, to disagreements originating at work and in private, to discord relating to the slave economy and the web of debts that slaves owed one another, to courtship rivalries, marital disputes, and adulterous affairs. Forret also uncovers the role of explicitly gendered violence in bondpeople's constructions of masculinity and femininity, suggesting a system of honor among slaves that would have been familiar to southern white men and women, had they cared to acknowledge it.Though many generations of scholars have examined violence in the South as perpetrated by and against whites, the internal clashes within the slave quarters have remained largely unexplored. Forret's analysis of intraracial slave conflicts in the Old South examines narratives of violence in slave communities, opening a new line of inquiry into the study of American slavery.

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Information

Publisher
LSU Press
Year
2015
ISBN
9780807161135

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Contents
  5. Tables
  6. Acknowledgments
  7. Introduction: Violence, Community, and Agency in the Slave South
  8. Chapter 1. Origins, Prevalence, and Patterns
  9. Chapter 2. Slaves, Masters, Church, and the Civil Law of Slavery
  10. Chapter 3. Intraracial Slave Homicide and the Criminal Law of Slavery
  11. Chapter 4. Violence at Work and Play
  12. Chapter 5. Violence and the Slave Economy
  13. Chapter 6. Violence in the Creation, Maintenance, and Destruction of Slave Unions
  14. Chapter 7. Honor, Violence, and Enslaved Masculinity
  15. Chapter 8. Honor, Violence, and Enslaved Femininity
  16. Epilogue: ā€œBlack-on-Black Violenceā€ in Historical Perspective
  17. Appendix: Intraracial Slave Homicides in Virginia, 1777ā€“1864
  18. Notes
  19. Bibliography
  20. Index