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Working toward freedom Book

Working toward freedom
Working toward freedom, The opportunity for slaves to produce goods, for their own use or for sale, facilitated the development of a domestic economy largely independent of their masters and the wider white community. Drawing from a range of primary sources, these essays show ho, Working toward freedom has a rating of 3.5 stars
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Working toward freedom, The opportunity for slaves to produce goods, for their own use or for sale, facilitated the development of a domestic economy largely independent of their masters and the wider white community. Drawing from a range of primary sources, these essays show ho, Working toward freedom
3.5 out of 5 stars based on 2 reviews
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  • Working toward freedom
  • Written by author Larry E. Hudson Jr
  • Published by Rochester, N.Y. : University of Rochester Press, 1994., 1996/01/29
  • The opportunity for slaves to produce goods, for their own use or for sale, facilitated the development of a domestic economy largely independent of their masters and the wider white community. Drawing from a range of primary sources, these essays show ho
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Introduction
"A Place in Time" Regained: A Fuller History of Colonial Chesapeake Slavery Through Group Biography 1
"A Reckoning of Accounts": Patriarchy, Market Relations, and Control on Henry Laurens's Lowcountry Plantations, 1762-1785 33
"My Constant Companion": Slaves and Their Dogs in the Antebellum South 53
"All That Cash": Work and Status in the Slave Quarters 77
Material Culture and Community Structure: The Slave and Tenant Community at Levi Jordan's Plantation, 1848-1892 95
Sale and Separation: Four Crises for Enslaved Women on the Ball Plantations, 1764-1854 119
"Rais your children up rite": Parental Guidance and Child Rearing Practices among Slaves in the Nineteenth-Century South 143
"It's a Family Affair:" Buying Freedom in the District of Columbia, 1850-1860 163
Symbol, Memory, and Service: Resistance and Family Formation in Nineteenth-Century African America 192
"She Make Funny Flat Cake She Call Saraka": Gullah Women and Food Practices Under Slavery 211
Concluding Reflections 233
Notes on Contributors 243
Index 245


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Working toward freedom, The opportunity for slaves to produce goods, for their own use or for sale, facilitated the development of a domestic economy largely independent of their masters and the wider white community. Drawing from a range of primary sources, these essays show ho, Working toward freedom

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Working toward freedom, The opportunity for slaves to produce goods, for their own use or for sale, facilitated the development of a domestic economy largely independent of their masters and the wider white community. Drawing from a range of primary sources, these essays show ho, Working toward freedom

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Working toward freedom, The opportunity for slaves to produce goods, for their own use or for sale, facilitated the development of a domestic economy largely independent of their masters and the wider white community. Drawing from a range of primary sources, these essays show ho, Working toward freedom

Working toward freedom

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