From the spring of 1830, the Kingston-based newspaper, Watchman and Jamaica Free Press, published a series of articles discussing the prevalence of interracial concubinage throughout the island of Jamaica. While many discussed concubines as the victims of white men’s lust, equally discussed was the role that mothers had in the continuation of this practice and the degradation of their children. Amid the movement for the abolition of slavery, respectable members of the free community of colour discussed concubines who engaged in interracial sex as unfit mothers and a hindrance to the social progress of the larger community of colour
On 2 August 1883, in Havana, a free black woman named Juana Mojena had a petition drafted on her beh...
Slaveholders believed women could both labour and care for their children simultaneously, and they r...
Beginning in the 1780s, British Caribbean plantocracies faced the looming threat of slave trade abol...
Recent work has emphasized the role of colonial state structures in the construction and enforcement...
Abstract of paper: The period between 1775 to 1825 saw the beginning of an abolitionist and planter ...
This thesis is concerned with the changes and continuities in the discourses surrounding sexual-econ...
NEWMAN Brooke, A Dark Inheritance : Blood, Race, and Sex in Colonial Jamaica, New Haven, Yale Univer...
Through the examination of testimony from formerly enslaved people who had been fathered by white me...
This article examines divorce petitions filed by white, southern women in the nineteenth century sla...
After decades of scholarly neglect, the pivotal roles played by enslaved African women in the socioc...
This article explores relations between free people of colour and white men in early nineteenth-cent...
This book analyzes textual representations of Jamaican slave women in three contexts--motherhood, in...
This article examines 125 court cases of infanticide and concealment of birth that were reported in ...
This dissertation explores the history of reproduction in the British Caribbean and the Atlantic wor...
In 1775, on a tour of the West Indies, Henry Smeathman produced a sketch entitled Creole Delicacy or...
On 2 August 1883, in Havana, a free black woman named Juana Mojena had a petition drafted on her beh...
Slaveholders believed women could both labour and care for their children simultaneously, and they r...
Beginning in the 1780s, British Caribbean plantocracies faced the looming threat of slave trade abol...
Recent work has emphasized the role of colonial state structures in the construction and enforcement...
Abstract of paper: The period between 1775 to 1825 saw the beginning of an abolitionist and planter ...
This thesis is concerned with the changes and continuities in the discourses surrounding sexual-econ...
NEWMAN Brooke, A Dark Inheritance : Blood, Race, and Sex in Colonial Jamaica, New Haven, Yale Univer...
Through the examination of testimony from formerly enslaved people who had been fathered by white me...
This article examines divorce petitions filed by white, southern women in the nineteenth century sla...
After decades of scholarly neglect, the pivotal roles played by enslaved African women in the socioc...
This article explores relations between free people of colour and white men in early nineteenth-cent...
This book analyzes textual representations of Jamaican slave women in three contexts--motherhood, in...
This article examines 125 court cases of infanticide and concealment of birth that were reported in ...
This dissertation explores the history of reproduction in the British Caribbean and the Atlantic wor...
In 1775, on a tour of the West Indies, Henry Smeathman produced a sketch entitled Creole Delicacy or...
On 2 August 1883, in Havana, a free black woman named Juana Mojena had a petition drafted on her beh...
Slaveholders believed women could both labour and care for their children simultaneously, and they r...
Beginning in the 1780s, British Caribbean plantocracies faced the looming threat of slave trade abol...