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Unrequited toil : a history of United States slavery

Schermerhorn, Calvin, 1975-2018
Books, Manuscripts
"The essence of United States slavery was forced labor. Enslaved people's unrequited toil built a significant portion of the nation's wealth. They labored in many farming, mining, construction, transport, and factory settings. But by the 1830s most worked in cotton fields in the Deep South in the most important sector of the American economy. The cotton bales they made streamed into factories in New and old England, spun into yarn and woven into fabric clothing people across the globe. Cotton shipped abroad each year increased from just a few thousand bales in 1790 to four million by 1860."--Provided by publisher.
Main title:
Unrequited toil : a history of United States slavery / by Calvin Schermerhorn, Arizona State University.
Imprint:
Cambridge ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Collation:
ix, 258 pages ; 23 cm.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Counter-revolutionaries -- Slow death for slavery? -- Cotton empire -- Black insurgency -- Financial chains -- Life in the quotidian -- Landscape of sexual violence -- Industrial discipline -- Narratives -- Geopolitics -- Abolition war -- No justice, no peace -- Conclusion.
ISBN:
9781107608580 (paperback)
Dewey class:
306.362
Language:
English
BRN:
374144
LocationCollectionCall numberStatus/Desc
PenrithNonfiction306.362 UNRAvailable
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