Review of the book, Slavery and Freedom: An Interpretation of the Old South by James Oakes. New York: Knopf, 1990. Slavery and Freedom pursues its thesis with dogged energy. Southerners took their definition of freedom from the liberal capitalist world which produced them and of which they remained a part, Oakes argues, and this could only mean that southern slavery was defined as the denial of the assumptions of liberal capitalism
The American South and the market Two scholars take on economic history Both David Carlton and Pet...
Economics and the Confederacy Could it be that the strong central state of the twentieth century—p...
Civil War Book Review (CWBR): Today the Civil War Book Review is pleased to speak with Graham Peck P...
Review of the book, Slavery and Freedom: An Interpretation of the Old South by James Oakes. New York...
Slavery in the Abstract Elite southerners argued in the antebellum era that hierarchy was natural...
The abolitionist movement in antebellum America provoked a frenzy of pro-slavery reaction. With the ...
An Anything but Peculiar Institution Slavery in a World Perspective Few historians have written ...
Review essay of the following books: Many Thousands Gone: The First Two Centuries of Slavery in Nort...
With regard to the struggles of the newly freed slaves, Dean Bond\u27s study of the Reconstruction l...
Stanford University economic historian Gavin Wright's clear, accessible, and deeply researched book...
Historians have long argued over the relationship of slavery to the world beyond slavery. Nineteenth...
Review of the book,The Fruits of Merchant Capital: Slavery and Bourgeois Property in the Rise and Ex...
The Long Road to Freedom Emancipation in the United States has generated a remarkably creative wave ...
Review of: Engines of Redemption: Railroads and the Reconstruction of Capitalism in the New South. B...
John Brown, author of Slave Life in Georgia, published in London in 1854, proffered a radical approa...
The American South and the market Two scholars take on economic history Both David Carlton and Pet...
Economics and the Confederacy Could it be that the strong central state of the twentieth century—p...
Civil War Book Review (CWBR): Today the Civil War Book Review is pleased to speak with Graham Peck P...
Review of the book, Slavery and Freedom: An Interpretation of the Old South by James Oakes. New York...
Slavery in the Abstract Elite southerners argued in the antebellum era that hierarchy was natural...
The abolitionist movement in antebellum America provoked a frenzy of pro-slavery reaction. With the ...
An Anything but Peculiar Institution Slavery in a World Perspective Few historians have written ...
Review essay of the following books: Many Thousands Gone: The First Two Centuries of Slavery in Nort...
With regard to the struggles of the newly freed slaves, Dean Bond\u27s study of the Reconstruction l...
Stanford University economic historian Gavin Wright's clear, accessible, and deeply researched book...
Historians have long argued over the relationship of slavery to the world beyond slavery. Nineteenth...
Review of the book,The Fruits of Merchant Capital: Slavery and Bourgeois Property in the Rise and Ex...
The Long Road to Freedom Emancipation in the United States has generated a remarkably creative wave ...
Review of: Engines of Redemption: Railroads and the Reconstruction of Capitalism in the New South. B...
John Brown, author of Slave Life in Georgia, published in London in 1854, proffered a radical approa...
The American South and the market Two scholars take on economic history Both David Carlton and Pet...
Economics and the Confederacy Could it be that the strong central state of the twentieth century—p...
Civil War Book Review (CWBR): Today the Civil War Book Review is pleased to speak with Graham Peck P...