54 research outputs found
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Reflections on the 'History and Historians' of the black woman's role in the community of slaves: enslaved women and intimate partner sexual violence
Taking as points of inspiration Peter Parish’s 1989 book, Slavery: History and Historians, and Angela Davis’s seminal 1971 article, “Reflections on the black woman’s role in the community of slaves,” this probes both historiographically and methodologically some of the challenges faced by historians writing about the lives of enslaved women through a case study of intimate partner violence among enslaved people in the antebellum South. Because rape and sexual assault have been defined in the past as non-consensual sexual acts supported by surviving legal evidence (generally testimony from court trials), it is hard for historians to research rape and sexual violence under slavery (especially marital rape) as there was no legal standing for the rape of enslaved women or the rape of any woman within marriage. This article suggests enslaved women recognized that black men could both be perpetrators of sexual violence and simultaneously be victims of the system of slavery. It also argues women stoically tolerated being forced into intimate relationships, sometimes even staying with “husbands” imposed upon them after emancipation
Le phénomène invisible : la composition de la famille et du foyer noirs après la guerre de Sécession
Gutman Herbert G. Le phénomène invisible : la composition de la famille et du foyer noirs après la guerre de Sécession. In: Annales. Économies, Sociétés, Civilisations. 27ᵉ année, N. 4-5, 1972. pp. 1197-1218
Who Built America: Working People and the Nation\u27s Economy, Politics, Culture and Society, Volume I: From Conquest and Colonization Through Reconstruction and the Great Uprising of 1877
At last, an American history about working Americans: what they thought, what they did, what happened to them. Volume One takes us from conquest and colonization through industrial expansion, the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Great Uprising of 1877https://scholar.dominican.edu/cynthia-stokes-brown-books-american-history/1086/thumbnail.jp
Who Built America: Working People and the Nation\u27s Economy, Politics, Culture and Society, Volume II: From the Gilded Age to the Present
At last, an American history about working Americans: what they thought, what they did, what happened to them. Volume Two takes us from the Gilded Age to the Present.https://scholar.dominican.edu/cynthia-stokes-brown-books-american-history/1087/thumbnail.jp
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