Slaveholders believed women could both labour and care for their children simultaneously, and they routinely exploited enslaved mothers as both workers and as reproducers. Using Stephanie Camp’s conceptualization of enslaved women’s bodies as sites of resistance, this article argues that despite slavery’s arduousness motherhood provided a place of refuge for enslaved women to enjoy their children and the camaraderie of their peers. However, women sometimes lamented bringing enslaved children into the world and strove not to do so, especially when pregnancy resulted from sexual assault. Slavery’s unique burdens meant many women participated in shared and more communal forms of mothering than their white counterparts
application/pdftextDuring slavery, enslaved women were exposed to the double exploitation of being p...
This paper reviews the historical work on slave breeding in the ante-bellum United States. Slave bre...
Slave women’s reproductive practices are central to understanding the gradual emancipation process i...
Slaveholders believed women could both labour and care for their children simultaneously, and they r...
This article explores the interventions of slaveholding women or ‘mistresses’ into enslaved women’s ...
Through the examination of testimony from formerly enslaved people who had been fathered by white me...
This article uses legal cases regarding infanticide in the American South to examine the intersectio...
Slavery in Missouri was typically small-scale in nature and featured smallholdings possessing few sl...
When white men exploited enslaved women's sexuality and sexual reproduction, enslaved men and slaveh...
Black women’s reproduction was foundational to Atlantic slave societies because it produced future l...
This article concentrates on the normative legal structure that established complete control over fe...
This thesis explores the relationality of enslaved and slaveholding women’s mothering in the antebe...
This article shows how and why some free black families ended up living among the enslaved in the la...
I formulated this project to explore the impact of sexual exploitation on enslaved women. By closely...
Forced sterilization in Black women has been an act of reproductive injustice since the abolishment ...
application/pdftextDuring slavery, enslaved women were exposed to the double exploitation of being p...
This paper reviews the historical work on slave breeding in the ante-bellum United States. Slave bre...
Slave women’s reproductive practices are central to understanding the gradual emancipation process i...
Slaveholders believed women could both labour and care for their children simultaneously, and they r...
This article explores the interventions of slaveholding women or ‘mistresses’ into enslaved women’s ...
Through the examination of testimony from formerly enslaved people who had been fathered by white me...
This article uses legal cases regarding infanticide in the American South to examine the intersectio...
Slavery in Missouri was typically small-scale in nature and featured smallholdings possessing few sl...
When white men exploited enslaved women's sexuality and sexual reproduction, enslaved men and slaveh...
Black women’s reproduction was foundational to Atlantic slave societies because it produced future l...
This article concentrates on the normative legal structure that established complete control over fe...
This thesis explores the relationality of enslaved and slaveholding women’s mothering in the antebe...
This article shows how and why some free black families ended up living among the enslaved in the la...
I formulated this project to explore the impact of sexual exploitation on enslaved women. By closely...
Forced sterilization in Black women has been an act of reproductive injustice since the abolishment ...
application/pdftextDuring slavery, enslaved women were exposed to the double exploitation of being p...
This paper reviews the historical work on slave breeding in the ante-bellum United States. Slave bre...
Slave women’s reproductive practices are central to understanding the gradual emancipation process i...