In this new interpretation of antebellum slavery, Anthony Kaye offers a vivid portrait of slaves transforming adjoining plantations into slave neighborhoods. He describes men and women opening paths from their owners' plantations to adjacent farms to go courting and take spouses, to work, to run away, and to otherwise contend with owners and their agents. In the course of cultivating family ties, forging alliances, working, socializing, and storytelling, slaves fashioned their neighborhoods into the locus of slave society.
Joining Places is the first book about slavery to use the pension files of former soldiers in the Union army, a vast source of rich testimony by ex-slaves. From these detailed accounts, Kaye tells the stories of men and women in love, "sweethearting," "taking up," "living together," and marrying across plantation lines; striving to get right with God; carving out neighborhoods as a terrain of struggle; and working to overthrow the slaveholders' regime. Kaye's depiction of slaves' sense of place in the Natchez District of Mississippi reveals a slave society that comprised not a single, monolithic community but an archipelago of many neighborhoods. Demonstrating that such neighborhoods prevailed across the South, he reformulates ideas about slave marriage, resistance, independent production, paternalism, autonomy, and the slave community that have defined decades of scholarship.
| Sobre o Livro |
Uma reinterpretação inovadora da escravidão no período anterior à Guerra Civil americana. Anthony Kaye reconstrói a vida cotidiana de homens e mulheres escravizados que transformavam plantações adjacentes em comunidades próprias, estabelecendo redes de relacionamento, trabalho e resistência que transcendiam as fronteiras impostas pelos proprietários. Baseado em fontes primárias inéditas — os arquivos de pensões de ex-soldados do Exército da União — o livro oferece testemunhos detalhados de pessoas escravizadas sobre casamentos, alianças familiares, práticas religiosas e estratégias de autonomia. Essas narrativas revelam dimensões humanas e sociais frequentemente ausentes da historiografia tradicional. A obra reformula conceitos fundamentais sobre comunidade escrava, paternalismo e resistência, demonstrando que a sociedade escravista não era monolítica, mas um arquipélago de múltiplos bairros e territórios. Essencial para compreender a agência e a vida social de pessoas escravizadas no Sul dos Estados Unidos, especialmente na região de Natchez, Mississippi.
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