Welcome to our new site!
If you had an account with us on our previous site, you'll need to reset your password here.
Dispossessed Lives: Enslaved Women, Violence, and the Archive (Early American Studies)
Description
In the eighteenth century, Bridgetown, Barbados, was heavily populated by both enslaved and free women. Marisa J. Fuentes creates a portrait of urban Caribbean slavery in this colonial town from the perspective of these women whose stories appear only briefly in historical records. Fuentes takes us through the streets of Bridgetown with an enslaved runaway; inside a brothel run by a freed woman of color; in the midst of a white urban household in sexual chaos; to the gallows where enslaved people were executed; and within violent scenes of enslaved women's punishments. In the process, Fuentes interrogates the archive and its historical production to expose the ongoing effects of white colonial power that constrain what can be known about these women.
Combining fragmentary sources with interdisciplinary methodologies that include black feminist theory and critical studies of history and slavery, Dispossessed Lives demonstrates how the construction of the archive marked enslaved women's bodies, in life and in death. By vividly recounting enslaved life through the experiences of individual women and illuminating their conditions of confinement through the legal, sexual, and representational power wielded by slave owners, colonial authorities, and the archive, Fuentes challenges the way we write histories of vulnerable and often invisible subjects.
Other Books in Series
Belonging: An Intimate History of Slavery and Family in Early New England (Early American Studies)
Undoing Slavery: Bodies, Race, and Rights in the Age of Abolition (Early American Studies)
The Disaffected: Britain's Occupation of Philadelphia During the American Revolution (Early American Studies)
The Rising Generation: Gradual Abolition, Black Legal Culture, and the Making of National Freedom (Early American Studies)
Coffee Nation: How One Commodity Transformed the Early United States (Early American Studies)
Before Disability: A History of American Citizenship (Early American Studies)
A Not-So-New World: Empire and Environment in French Colonial North America (Early American Studies)
Colonial Ecology, Atlantic Economy: Transforming Nature in Early New England (Early American Studies)
Speculation Nation: Land Mania in the Revolutionary American Republic (Early American Studies)
Cast Down: Abjection in America, 1700-1850 (Early American Studies)
Debility and Power: How Climate Knowledge Made the Nineteenth-Century Us South (Early American Studies)
Contested Currents: Rivers and the Remaking of New England (Early American Studies)
John James Audubon: The Nature of the American Woodsman (Early American Studies)
The Invention of Rum: Creating the Quintessential Atlantic Commodity (Early American Studies)
The Predatory Sea: Human Trafficking and Captivity in the Seventeenth-Century Caribbean (Early American Studies)
Captives of Liberty: Prisoners of War and the Politics of Vengeance in the American Revolution (Early American Studies)
Zamumo's Gifts: Indian-European Exchange in the Colonial Southeast (Early American Studies)
Colonial Complexions: Race and Bodies in Eighteenth-Century America (Early American Studies)
