The Ruling Race: A History of American SlaveholdersKnopf, 1982 - 307 halaman "This ... social history of the slaveholding South marks a turn in our understanding of antebellum America and the coming of the Civil War. Oakes's ... analysis breaks the myth that slaveholders were a paternalistic aristocracy dedicated to the values of honor, race, and section. Instead they emerge as having much in common with their entrepreneurial counterparts in the North: they were committed to free-market commercialism and political democracy for white males. The Civil War was not an inevitable conflict between civilizations on different paths but the crack-up of a single system, the result of people and events"--From publisher's description. |
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Halaman xii
... appear to be Genovese's assumptions ; they are mine also . Indeed , it is the very clarification of definitions stemming from Genovese's work that throws our disagreements into sharp relief . I see paternalism giving way to liberalism ...
... appear to be Genovese's assumptions ; they are mine also . Indeed , it is the very clarification of definitions stemming from Genovese's work that throws our disagreements into sharp relief . I see paternalism giving way to liberalism ...
Halaman 52
... small slaveholder to the next . Walter Overton , for example , was born in Virginia in 1830 , and after graduating from Mercer College moved to Georgia , where he married and settled down . He does not appear to 52 THE RULING RACE.
... small slaveholder to the next . Walter Overton , for example , was born in Virginia in 1830 , and after graduating from Mercer College moved to Georgia , where he married and settled down . He does not appear to 52 THE RULING RACE.
Halaman 85
... appear to have been unaware of it . Rather than move out of their original " log huts , " Joseph Ingraham explained , the slavehold- ers ' " whole time and attention were engaged in the culture of cotton ; and embellishment , either of ...
... appear to have been unaware of it . Rather than move out of their original " log huts , " Joseph Ingraham explained , the slavehold- ers ' " whole time and attention were engaged in the culture of cotton ; and embellishment , either of ...
Isi
Revolutionary Slaveholders | 3 |
THE MARKET CULTURE | 35 |
The Slaveholders Pilgrimage | 69 |
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Alabama American antebellum became become believed bondage bondsmen century colonial complained conservative continued cotton County crops culture death defense democracy democratic Diary economic entry equal evangelical explained farm Farmers father fear Florida force freedom George Georgia Henry Watson Hist History House human ideal institution interest James John Journal labor land less Letters live Louisiana majority masters material Mississippi mobility moved nature nearly negroes never North northern Olmsted overseer owners Papers paternalism paternalistic plantation planter political poor population practice principles profits prosperity religious Representatives resistance rules secession seemed slaveholders slavery slaves social society South Carolina southern success suggested Texas tion town trade tradition Union United Virginia wealth West William Dunbar wrote York
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The Emergence of Black English: Text and Commentary Guy Bailey,Natalie Maynor,Patricia Cukor-Avila Pratinjau tidak tersedia - 1991 |