This book explores the history of slavery in the Atlantic World through the lens of emotion. Combining methods from the history of emotions with those from slavery studies often for the first time, this collection provides new and important perspectives on the role that emotion played in various slave societies across the Atlantic World.
This book explores the history of slavery in the Atlantic World through the lens of emotion. Combining methods from the history of emotions with those from slavery studies often for the first time, this collection provides new and important perspectives on the role that emotion played in various slave societies across the Atlantic World.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Beth Wilson is a BA-funded Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Oxford, UK, specialising in the history of slavery in the US South and the history of emotions. Emily West is Professor of American History at the University of Oxford, UK, specialising in the history of slavery, gender, and women in the antebellum US South.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. The Poison Pen: Slavery, Poison and Fear in the Antebellum Press 2. The Performance and Appearance of Confidence Among the Enslavers of South Carolina and Cuba. 3. 'Happiness in Havana? Dia de Reyes as an Emotional Refuge in Colonial Cuba 4. "Horrible enough to stir a man's soul": Enslaved Men, Emotions, and Heterosexual Intimacy in the Antebellum US South 5. "Her Work of Love": Forced Separations, Maternal Grief, and Enslaved Mothers' Emotional Practices in the Antebellum US South 6. "She died from grief": Trauma and Emotion in Information Wanted Advertisement 7. Trials of Enslavers in Former French Colonies in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries: Testimonies of the Enslaved between Gratitude and Fear 8. Enslavement, Emotions and Oppositional Insolence in the Slave Society of British Guiana 9. 'Memory, Trauma and 'Affective Autonomy': Displaying Emotion and Trauma at the International Slavery Museum 10. 'Whose Emotions?'
Introduction 1. The Poison Pen: Slavery, Poison and Fear in the Antebellum Press 2. The Performance and Appearance of Confidence Among the Enslavers of South Carolina and Cuba. 3. 'Happiness in Havana? Dia de Reyes as an Emotional Refuge in Colonial Cuba 4. "Horrible enough to stir a man's soul": Enslaved Men, Emotions, and Heterosexual Intimacy in the Antebellum US South 5. "Her Work of Love": Forced Separations, Maternal Grief, and Enslaved Mothers' Emotional Practices in the Antebellum US South 6. "She died from grief": Trauma and Emotion in Information Wanted Advertisement 7. Trials of Enslavers in Former French Colonies in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries: Testimonies of the Enslaved between Gratitude and Fear 8. Enslavement, Emotions and Oppositional Insolence in the Slave Society of British Guiana 9. 'Memory, Trauma and 'Affective Autonomy': Displaying Emotion and Trauma at the International Slavery Museum 10. 'Whose Emotions?'
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