Voices of the Enslaved: Love, Labor, and Longing in French Louisiana

Available
Product Details
Price
$34.44
Publisher
Omohundro Institute and Unc Press
Publish Date
Pages
352
Dimensions
7.8 X 9.2 X 0.8 inches | 1.1 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781469666266

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About the Author
Sophie White is professor of American studies at the University of Notre Dame. She is the author of Wild Frenchmen and Frenchified Indians: Material Culture and Race in Colonial Louisiana and co-editor of Hearing Enslaved Voices: African and Indian Slave Testimony in British and French America, 1700-1848.
Reviews
Through meticulously recorded and preserved legal testimony derived from criminal trials in 18th-century New Orleans, White details how slaves perceived their own cultural reality as well as that of the ruling masters. The stories provided offer insight into their morals, societal values, and views on labor, violence, and familial bonds. The author intersperses her narrative with records in French and includes multiple paintings, samples of documented testimony, maps, and architectural sketches that help bring these figures and their plight to life. . . . Graduate students and professionals will find it uniquely enlightening."--CHOICE


A compelling and insightful chronicle of the lives of individual enslaved men and women in French colonial Louisiana."--Journal of Southern History


A remarkable achievement of historical interpretation from fragmentary documents, even sources as comparably rich as court transcripts, and . . . an impressive contribution to scholarship on the African diaspora in the French Atlantic."--H-Net Reviews


Any effort to review this work can only fall short because of the sheer beauty of White's written word and the profound depictions that she pens."--Journal of Early American History