For free black women in the pre-Civil War American South, the status offered by ‘freedom’ was uncertain and malleable. The conceptualization of bondage and freedom as two diametrically opposed conditions therefore fails to make sense of the complexities of life for these women. Instead, notions of enslavement and freedom are better framed as a spectrum. This article develops this idea by exploring two of the ways in which some black women negotiated their status before the law—namely though petitioning for residency or for enslavement. While these petitions are atypical numerically, and often offer tantalizingly scant evidence, when used in conjunction with evidence from the US census, it becomes clear that these women were highly pragmatic...
International audienceContrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possi...
Black and white women in Virginia were on the front lines of the struggle over emancipation during a...
Contrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possible to regions outside...
During the processes of emancipation and Reconstruction, black women’s legal, socio-political, and e...
Between Slavery and Freedom explores the complex world of those people of African birth or descent w...
Between Slavery and Freedom explores the complex world of those people of African birth or descent w...
This article provides an analysis of how slave women, during the period from the American Revolution...
This article shows how and why some free black families ended up living among the enslaved in the la...
This article investigates the relationship between manumission laws and enslaved women's bodies in M...
This article investigates the relationship between manumission laws and enslaved women's bodies in M...
“A Freedom No Greater Than Bondage: Black Refugees and Unfree Labor at the Dawn of Mass Incarceratio...
“A Freedom No Greater Than Bondage: Black Refugees and Unfree Labor at the Dawn of Mass Incarceratio...
Forging New Ground in Antebellum Charleston Sophie Mauncaut, once enslaved in French Saint Domingue,...
This study explores the complex relationship between southern women and their ideas of independence ...
Black and white women in Virginia were on the front lines of the struggle over emancipation during a...
International audienceContrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possi...
Black and white women in Virginia were on the front lines of the struggle over emancipation during a...
Contrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possible to regions outside...
During the processes of emancipation and Reconstruction, black women’s legal, socio-political, and e...
Between Slavery and Freedom explores the complex world of those people of African birth or descent w...
Between Slavery and Freedom explores the complex world of those people of African birth or descent w...
This article provides an analysis of how slave women, during the period from the American Revolution...
This article shows how and why some free black families ended up living among the enslaved in the la...
This article investigates the relationship between manumission laws and enslaved women's bodies in M...
This article investigates the relationship between manumission laws and enslaved women's bodies in M...
“A Freedom No Greater Than Bondage: Black Refugees and Unfree Labor at the Dawn of Mass Incarceratio...
“A Freedom No Greater Than Bondage: Black Refugees and Unfree Labor at the Dawn of Mass Incarceratio...
Forging New Ground in Antebellum Charleston Sophie Mauncaut, once enslaved in French Saint Domingue,...
This study explores the complex relationship between southern women and their ideas of independence ...
Black and white women in Virginia were on the front lines of the struggle over emancipation during a...
International audienceContrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possi...
Black and white women in Virginia were on the front lines of the struggle over emancipation during a...
Contrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possible to regions outside...