This thesis examines social and economic change among Black Creoles in the sugarcane plantation society of St. Martin Parish, Louisiana. It begins with slavery and emphasizes the last 40 years. The study area is viewed as a creole society set in the United States. Change and adaptation is analysed from the perspective of those lacking access to, and control over, resources ensuring socio-economic advancement. Factors of race and ethnicity are crucial to the analysis.Changes in the agricultural economy have cast blacks off the land. In local settlements, they form a surplus labor pool. In today's industrial, neoplantation economy, Civil Rights legislation and alliances beyond the study area have ensured black participation, particularly at a...
In treating this topic, The Rise And Effect of Socials Organizations in Louisiana During Reconstruct...
The capture of New Orleans by Union forces in 1862 led to the emancipation of thousands of slaves ac...
text"Making Race: The Role of Free Blacks in the Development of New Orleans' Three-Caste Society, 17...
This article considers the social and economic conditions under which Creoles of Color left the stat...
The thesis explores the ways in which residents of West Feliciana Parish, Louisiana experienced and ...
During the five decades between the War of 1812 and the end of the Civil War, southern Louisianans d...
Using two Atlantic World events— the Haitian Revolution and Nat Turner’s Rebellion— as temporal boo...
Documenting Louisiana Sugar provides historians and social scientists with an innovative tool for ex...
This study uses the archaeological record and historic data specific to two early nineteenth-century...
This study examined the factors influencing the emergence of an unequal social order in precolonial ...
Multiple perspectives: historic, political, descriptive, educational, ethnographic, and economic str...
Most of the research done on the Louisiana Creole community has concentrated on the vocabulary and f...
According to Du Bois, race had been obvious in the nineteenth century, a matter of course. Neverthel...
During the nineteenth century, the Gulf of Mexico fostered the movement of people, ideas, and news t...
This dissertation focuses on ordinary whites in a lowcountry community notable for its African-Ameri...
In treating this topic, The Rise And Effect of Socials Organizations in Louisiana During Reconstruct...
The capture of New Orleans by Union forces in 1862 led to the emancipation of thousands of slaves ac...
text"Making Race: The Role of Free Blacks in the Development of New Orleans' Three-Caste Society, 17...
This article considers the social and economic conditions under which Creoles of Color left the stat...
The thesis explores the ways in which residents of West Feliciana Parish, Louisiana experienced and ...
During the five decades between the War of 1812 and the end of the Civil War, southern Louisianans d...
Using two Atlantic World events— the Haitian Revolution and Nat Turner’s Rebellion— as temporal boo...
Documenting Louisiana Sugar provides historians and social scientists with an innovative tool for ex...
This study uses the archaeological record and historic data specific to two early nineteenth-century...
This study examined the factors influencing the emergence of an unequal social order in precolonial ...
Multiple perspectives: historic, political, descriptive, educational, ethnographic, and economic str...
Most of the research done on the Louisiana Creole community has concentrated on the vocabulary and f...
According to Du Bois, race had been obvious in the nineteenth century, a matter of course. Neverthel...
During the nineteenth century, the Gulf of Mexico fostered the movement of people, ideas, and news t...
This dissertation focuses on ordinary whites in a lowcountry community notable for its African-Ameri...
In treating this topic, The Rise And Effect of Socials Organizations in Louisiana During Reconstruct...
The capture of New Orleans by Union forces in 1862 led to the emancipation of thousands of slaves ac...
text"Making Race: The Role of Free Blacks in the Development of New Orleans' Three-Caste Society, 17...