Unburdened By Conscience: A Black People's Collective Account of America's Ante-Bellum South and the Aftermath
Autor Anthony W. Nealen Limba Engleză Paperback – 3 iun 2011
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780761854920
ISBN-10: 0761854924
Pagini: 172
Dimensiuni: 157 x 235 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.26 kg
Ediția:3
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția University Press of America
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0761854924
Pagini: 172
Dimensiuni: 157 x 235 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.26 kg
Ediția:3
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția University Press of America
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Part One: Brutality and Physical Repression
Chapter 1: Scholarship on the Brutality of American Slavery
Chapter 2: A Monopoly of Violence in the Slaveholder's Hands
Chapter 3: The Slaves' Undying Faith in God
Chapter 4: The Torture of Black Women and Children
Chapter 5: Public Whippings: A Terrible Part of Living
Chapter 6: White Man's Law: Black Man's Grief
Chapter 7: The Omnipresent Slave Patrols
Part Two: Master-on-Slave Rape
Chapter 8: A Reluctance to Call it Rape
Chapter 9: Master-on-Slave Rape Revealed
Chapter 10: The Threat of Injury or Death
Chapter 11: Slave Resistance
Chapter 12: Rape and Slave Breeding
Chapter 13: Begetting Children for Profit
Part Three: Slave Family Break-Ups
Chapter 14: The Humane Home-Breaker in Slavery Historiography
Chapter 15: The Importance of the Slave Family
Chapter 16: The Break-Up of Marital Unions through Slave Sales
Chapter 17: The Promiscuous Bondswoman: Myth or Reality?
Chapter 18: The Break-Up of Slave Families
Part Four: The Aftermath
Chapter 19: One Hundred More Years of Racism and Cruelty
Chapter 20: Epilogue
Chapter 1: Scholarship on the Brutality of American Slavery
Chapter 2: A Monopoly of Violence in the Slaveholder's Hands
Chapter 3: The Slaves' Undying Faith in God
Chapter 4: The Torture of Black Women and Children
Chapter 5: Public Whippings: A Terrible Part of Living
Chapter 6: White Man's Law: Black Man's Grief
Chapter 7: The Omnipresent Slave Patrols
Part Two: Master-on-Slave Rape
Chapter 8: A Reluctance to Call it Rape
Chapter 9: Master-on-Slave Rape Revealed
Chapter 10: The Threat of Injury or Death
Chapter 11: Slave Resistance
Chapter 12: Rape and Slave Breeding
Chapter 13: Begetting Children for Profit
Part Three: Slave Family Break-Ups
Chapter 14: The Humane Home-Breaker in Slavery Historiography
Chapter 15: The Importance of the Slave Family
Chapter 16: The Break-Up of Marital Unions through Slave Sales
Chapter 17: The Promiscuous Bondswoman: Myth or Reality?
Chapter 18: The Break-Up of Slave Families
Part Four: The Aftermath
Chapter 19: One Hundred More Years of Racism and Cruelty
Chapter 20: Epilogue
Recenzii
Well-written and thoroughly researched. . . . [S]hould become a standard text for African-American Studies courses that delve into the gross dehumanizing effects of American slavery.
An impressive level of scholarship. . . . . [A] brilliant and important piece of work.
It is the story of why all citizens need to be aware of the potential cost of intolerance within a society based on race, age, religion, physical and mental ability, and sex. This is a book that should be read by all those interested in American history, especially by those studying 19th-century America, the South, slavery or race relations in America.
Unburdened by Conscience sets the record straight by relying on narratives and journals kept by ex-slaves rather than on academic texts which never bothered to consider the African-American experience . . . .[T]he book represents a refreshing alternative to the conventional wisdom in much the same way that the late Howard Zinn painted an empathetic picture from the point-of-view of blacks, women, Native-Americans and other oppressed groups in A People's History of the United States . . . . A sobering opus belatedly shedding light on a shameful chapter of our cultural legacy.
Unburdened by Conscience is a riveting and complete account on this dark shadow of American history.
An impressive level of scholarship. . . . . [A] brilliant and important piece of work.
It is the story of why all citizens need to be aware of the potential cost of intolerance within a society based on race, age, religion, physical and mental ability, and sex. This is a book that should be read by all those interested in American history, especially by those studying 19th-century America, the South, slavery or race relations in America.
Unburdened by Conscience sets the record straight by relying on narratives and journals kept by ex-slaves rather than on academic texts which never bothered to consider the African-American experience . . . .[T]he book represents a refreshing alternative to the conventional wisdom in much the same way that the late Howard Zinn painted an empathetic picture from the point-of-view of blacks, women, Native-Americans and other oppressed groups in A People's History of the United States . . . . A sobering opus belatedly shedding light on a shameful chapter of our cultural legacy.
Unburdened by Conscience is a riveting and complete account on this dark shadow of American history.