14 research outputs found

    An investigation of teacher attitudes toward supervision

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    Not available.John Paul GarrigusNot ListedNot ListedMaster of ScienceDepartment Not ListedCunningham Memorial library, Terre Haute, Indiana State University.isua-thesis-1947-garrigus.pdfMastersTitle from document title page. document formatted into pages: contains 34: ill. Includes appendix and bibliography

    The Plantation Machine: Atlantic Capitalism in French Saint-Domingue and British Jamaica

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    Jamaica and Saint-Domingue were especially brutal but conspicuously successful eighteenth-century slave societies and imperial colonies. These plantation regimes were, to adopt a metaphor of the era, complex "machines," finely tuned over time by planters, merchants, and officials to become more efficient at exploiting their enslaved workers and serving their empires. Using a wide range of archival evidence, The Plantation Machine traces a critical half-century in the development of the social, economic, and political frameworks that made these societies possible. Trevor Burnard and John Garrigus find deep and unexpected similarities in these two prize colonies of empires that fought each other throughout the period. Jamaica and Saint-Domingue experienced, at nearly the same moment, a bitter feud between planters and governors, a violent conflict between masters and enslaved workers, a fateful tightening of racial laws, a steady expansion of the slave trade, and metropolitan criticism of planters' cruelty.The core of The Plantation Machine addresses the Seven Years' War and its aftermath. The events of that period, notably a slave poisoning scare in Saint-Domingue and a near-simultaneous slave revolt in Jamaica, cemented white dominance in both colonies. Burnard and Garrigus argue that local political concerns, not emerging racial ideologies, explain the rise of distinctive forms of racism in these two societies. The American Revolution provided another imperial crisis for the beneficiaries of the plantation machine, but by the 1780s whites in each place were prospering as never before—and blacks were suffering in new and disturbing ways. The result was that Jamaica and Saint-Domingue became vitally important parts of the late eighteenth-century American empires of Britain and France

    A Secret Among The Blacks, Of Which The Whites Know Nothing: The Political Vision Of Enslaved West Africans In 1750s Saint-Domingue

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    How did Africans imagine the future of the Caribbean slave societies where they lived? In an extraordinary 1757 confession, a man enslaved in Saint-Domingue revealed that he and others were working to create a free black population large enough “to confront the whites if necessary.” In other words, they foresaw a time when free blacks would assert themselves, not against slavery necessarily, but against racial bias. The 1757 confession came from MĂ©dor, who had spent 20 years enslaved to a physician and coffee planter. He declared to his master that the medicines he purchased from fellow West Africans had killed slaves and livestock on the plantation. He hoped his revelation would lead to the arrest of these “pernicious men”. While describing how West Africans in his circle made and administered such substances, MĂ©dor divulged that he and others had been secretly dosing their masters for years, sharing drugs they believed would lead to their own manumission. White interrogators believed MĂ©dor and his colleagues were trying to poison their masters. The paper argues that an unidentified outbreak of anthrax likely struck down those MĂ©dor believed he had inadvertently killed. MĂ©dor and the other slaves accused of poisoning in subsequent weeks claimed that their medicines were intended to heal relationships, or even to cloud a master’s thinking, so he or she would commit to manumission. After two full days of interrogation, MĂ©dor committed suicide when he realized that colonists planned to burn him at the stake. The last third of the paper describes how MĂ©dor’s confession changes our understanding of Saint-Domingue and then successful slave revolution it produced. In his 1980 book From Rebellion to Revolution, Eugene Genovese theorized that the Haitian Revolution was a turning point in slave uprisings. Before 1791 rebels sought to create African-style societies in the Americas while after the Haitian Revolution they focused on winning civil and human rights. MĂ©dor’s testimony shows that Genovese’s dichotomy is too stark. Thirty years before the Haitian Revolution, the West African foresaw a Saint-Domingue in which blacks would force whites to make changes in society. Slavery might still exist in that future world, but so many blacks would live in freedom that race would no longer define bondage. In MĂ©dor’s Saint-Domingue, people of color made up only 20 percent of the free population. In 1790, their share had grown to nearly half. Many were former slaves, with family members still in bondage. The paper will describe the many factors that created this free black population and shaped its political goals. It argues that free blacks’ willingness to confront whites to transform their own place in society was an essential element in the success of the Haitian Revolution
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