000 03639cam a2200385 i 4500
003 CUTN
005 20240507104216.0
008 200811s2022 enka b 001 0 eng
020 _a9781474285582
020 _a9781474285575
020 _z9781474285599
020 _z9781474285605
041 _aEnglish
042 _apcc
082 0 0 _a306.362
_223
_bDOD
245 0 0 _aWriting the history of slavery /
_cedited by David Stefan Doddington and Enrico Dal Lago.
260 _aLondon :
_bBloomsbury Academic,
_c2022.
300 _axii, 462 pages :
_billustrations ;
_c24 cm.
490 0 _aWriting history
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 446) and index.
505 _tPart I: Global approaches 1 Defining slavery in global perspective (David Lewis, University of Edinburgh, UK) 2 Writing global histories of slavery (Michael Zeuske, University of Cologne, Germany, University of Bonn, Germany, Universidad de la Habana, Cuba) 3 Slavery and empire (Trevor Burnard, University of Hull, UK) 4 The 'Great Divergence': Slavery, capitalism and world-economy, (Dale Tomich, Binghamton University, USA) 5 Approaches to global antislavery (Seymour Drescher, University of Pittsburgh, USA) 6 Comparative and transnational histories of slavery (Enrico Dal Lago, National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland) Part II: Themes and methods 7 Political and legal histories of slavery (Sue Peabody, Washington State University, USA) 8 Writing national histories of slavery (Lewis Eliot, University of Oklahoma, USA) 9 Writing the religious history of the enslaved in the Atlantic World (Matt D. Childs, University of South Carolina, USA) 10 What historians of slavery write about when we write about race, (Jacqueline Jones, University of Texas at Austin, USA) 11 Gender history and slavery (David Stefan Doddington, Cardiff University, UK) 12 Dispossessed lives: Enslaved women, violence, and the archive, (Marisa J. Fuentes, Rutgers University, USA with an introduction from Elizabeth Maeve Barnes, University of Reading, UK) 13 Slavery, postcolonialism and the colonial archive, (Andrea Major, University of Leeds, UK) 14 Imagining slavery in Roman antiquity (K.R. Bradley, University of Notre Dame, USA) 15 Quantitative histories of slavery, (Andrea Livesey, Liverpool John Moores University, UK) 16 Psychohistory and slavery, (Patrick H. Breen, Providence College, USA) 17 Material culture, archaeology and slavery, (Lydia Wilson Marshall, DePauw University, USA) 18 Slavery and the cultural turn, (Raquel Kennon, California State University, Northridge, USA) 19 Re-tooling memory and memory tools: America's ongoing re-memory of slavery, (Marcus Wood, University of Sussex, UK)
520 _a"Exploring the major historiographical, theoretical, and methodological approaches that have shaped studies on slavery, this addition to the Writing History series highlights the varied ways that historians have approached the fluid and complex systems of human bondage, domination, and exploitation that have developed in societies across the world"--
650 0 _aSlavery
650 0 _aSlavery
650 0 _xHistory.
650 0 _xHistoriography.
700 1 _aDoddington, David Stefan,
700 1 _aDal Lago, Enrico,
700 1 _d1986-
_eeditor.
700 1 _d1966-
_eeditor.
776 0 8 _iOnline version:
_tWriting the history of slavery
_dNew York : Bloomsbury Academic, 2021.
_z9781474285599
_w(DLC) 2020036015
906 _a7
_bcbc
_corignew
_d1
_eecip
_f20
_gy-gencatlg
942 _2ddc
_cBOOKS
999 _c42947
_d42947