Slavery and slaving in world history a bibliography, 1900-91
Transcripción
Slavery and slaving in world history a bibliography, 1900-91
SLAVERY AND SLAVING IN WORLD HISTORY A BIBLIOGRAPHY, 1900-91 *** JOSEPH C. MILLER Contents ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .................................................................................................................5 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................8 DEFINITION OF COVERAGE ..................................................................................................................9 ORGANIZATION OF LISTINGS .............................................................................................................10 BIBLIOGRAPHY...............................................................................................................................13 I. GENERAL AND COMPARATIVE.............................................................................................13 II. NORTH AMERICA ....................................................................................................................68 1. General and Comparative .......................................................................................................68 2. New England and the Middle Colonies .................................................................................133 3. Chesapeake ...........................................................................................................................142 4. Colonial South.......................................................................................................................161 5. Ante-Bellum South.................................................................................................................169 6. Ante-Bellum Upper South......................................................................................................202 7. Louisiana...............................................................................................................................207 8. Texas .....................................................................................................................................212 9. Florida ..................................................................................................................................214 10. Other ...................................................................................................................................215 11. Biographies .........................................................................................................................219 12. Canada ................................................................................................................................223 BIBLIOGRAPHY - I ........................................................................................................................695 (GENERAL/COMPARATIVE - U.S.) ............................................................................................695 I. GENERAL AND COMPARATIVE ....................................................................................................695 II. NORTH AMERICA.......................................................................................................................716 1. General and Comparative .....................................................................................................716 2. New England and Middle Colonies.......................................................................................732 3. Chesapeake ...........................................................................................................................735 4. Colonial South.......................................................................................................................743 5. Ante-Bellum South.................................................................................................................744 6. Ante-Bellum Upper South......................................................................................................770 7. Louisiana...............................................................................................................................772 8. Texas .....................................................................................................................................775 9. Florida ..................................................................................................................................776 10. Other ...................................................................................................................................778 11. Biographies and Autobiographies.......................................................................................779 12. Canada ................................................................................................................................782 BIBLIOGRAPHY -- II .....................................................................................................................783 (SPANISH MAINLAND-AFRICA) ................................................................................................783 III. SPANISH MAINLAND ................................................................................................................783 1. General and Comparative .....................................................................................................783 1 2. Mexico ...................................................................................................................................784 3. Central America ....................................................................................................................786 4. New Granada and Gran Colombia .......................................................................................786 5. Colombia ...............................................................................................................................787 6. Venezuela ..............................................................................................................................787 7. Ecuador .................................................................................................................................787 8. Peru.......................................................................................................................................788 9. Bolivia ...................................................................................................................................788 10. Chile ....................................................................................................................................788 11. Argentina.............................................................................................................................788 12. Uruguay...............................................................................................................................789 13. Paraguay .............................................................................................................................789 IV. BRAZIL.....................................................................................................................................789 1. General and Comparative .....................................................................................................789 2. Northern ................................................................................................................................794 3. Northeast ...............................................................................................................................794 4. Center-South .........................................................................................................................796 5. South......................................................................................................................................799 6. West.......................................................................................................................................799 V. CARIBBEAN ...............................................................................................................................799 1. General and Comparative .....................................................................................................799 2. English ..................................................................................................................................803 3. Spanish ..................................................................................................................................810 4. French ...................................................................................................................................815 5. Dutch.....................................................................................................................................825 6. Other .....................................................................................................................................833 VI. AFRICA ....................................................................................................................................834 1. General (Non-Muslim) ..........................................................................................................834 2. Cape of Good Hope...............................................................................................................839 3. Portuguese Colonies .............................................................................................................843 4. Madagascar...........................................................................................................................843 5. Ethiopia .................................................................................................................................843 SLAVERY - BIBLIOGRAPHY 1992-94 -- III ...............................................................................844 (MUSLIM - SLAVE TRADE) .........................................................................................................844 VII. MUSLIM ..................................................................................................................................844 1. General and Comparative .....................................................................................................844 2. Caliphate and Arabia ............................................................................................................845 3. Ottoman Empire - Muslim Turkey.........................................................................................845 4. Muslim Egypt ........................................................................................................................846 5. North Africa and the Sahara .................................................................................................847 6. Nilotic Sudan and the Horn...................................................................................................849 7. Muslim West Africa ...............................................................................................................849 8. Muslim East Africa................................................................................................................850 9. Muslim Asia...........................................................................................................................850 10. Other ...................................................................................................................................850 2 VIII. ANCIENT ...............................................................................................................................850 1. General and Comparative .....................................................................................................850 2. Ancient Near East..................................................................................................................854 3. Greece and Dependencies .....................................................................................................856 4. Rome and Provinces..............................................................................................................860 5. Egypt .....................................................................................................................................874 6. Other .....................................................................................................................................874 IX. MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN EUROPE ................................................................................875 1. General and Comparative .....................................................................................................875 2. Byzantine ...............................................................................................................................875 3. Italy and Colonies .................................................................................................................876 4. Iberia.....................................................................................................................................876 5. France ...................................................................................................................................877 6. England .................................................................................................................................878 7. Eastern Europe and Russia ...................................................................................................879 8. Scandinavia ...........................................................................................................................879 9. Other .....................................................................................................................................879 X. OTHER .......................................................................................................................................879 1. Asia - General and Comparative...........................................................................................879 2. East Asia................................................................................................................................879 3. Southeast Asia .......................................................................................................................880 4. Indian Subcontinent...............................................................................................................880 5. Oceania .................................................................................................................................881 6. Amerindian............................................................................................................................881 7. Indian Ocean (Mascarenes Islands, etc.) ..............................................................................882 8. Modern ..................................................................................................................................883 9. Other .....................................................................................................................................884 XI. SLAVE TRADE ..........................................................................................................................884 1. Atlantic - General..................................................................................................................884 2. Atlantic - Individual Voyages and Captains..........................................................................889 3. Atlantic - Portuguese and Brazilian ......................................................................................889 4. Atlantic - Spanish ..................................................................................................................891 5. Atlantic - British ....................................................................................................................891 6. Atlantic - Dutch .....................................................................................................................895 7. Atlantic - French ...................................................................................................................895 8. Atlantic - English North American Colonies, United States..................................................899 9. Atlantic - Other .....................................................................................................................899 10. American Internal (United States, Brazil, Caribbean, etc.) ................................................900 11. Indian Ocean.......................................................................................................................901 12. Trans-Saharan and Red Sea................................................................................................901 13. Effects on Africa ..................................................................................................................902 14. Trade within Africa .............................................................................................................906 15. Medieval and Early Modern Mediterranean.......................................................................907 16. Other ...................................................................................................................................907 SUBJECT INDEX ............................................................................................................................908 3 AUTHOR INDEX .............................................................................................................................977 4 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS IT IS ALWAYS a pleasure to acknowledge the collaboration and support of the many colleagues and associates who have contributed to the compilation of this bibliography over, now, more than two decades. The project has become very much a cooperative endeavor, as the years have passed since the opportunity to teach comparative slavery to University of Virginia students first presented itself in 1972. This is far from the first bibliographical effort in the field of slavery, and I have made extensive use of my predecessors' works as starting points for many of the entries developed here. Most are traceable through the index listing for "Bibliographies". In particular, for ancient slavery, I have drawn on Norbert Brockmeyer's extensive compilations.1 Jonathon Silk's investigations into slavery in ancient India provided a substantial portion of the current section on that world region.2 Gulnihal Bozkurt contributed her bibiography in Turkish on Ottoman slavery.3 Key monographs also provided entré to other areas. Scholars of American slavery will be familiar with, and grateful for, John David Smith's very large Black Slavery in the Americas.4 Users of the earlier, partial, bibliographies that have now been brought together between these covers5 will be familiar with the names of the extremely talented series of Virginia history graduate students who have scoured libraries, searched data bases, tracked down footnotes, smelled out the truth behind partial and erroneous references that have reached us, developed search procedures, stood at photocopying machines, sought the elusive "v" with which we designate confirmed "verified" entries in our working drafts with the determination of detectives, and -- in the process -- become friends as well as collaborators. Collectively they have brought the bibliography to its present state of relative completeness. 1 Bibliographie zur antiken Sklaverei (ed. J. Vogt) (Bochum: Buchhandlung Brockmeyer, 1971) and Antike Sklaverei (Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1979). 2 "A Bibliography on Ancient Indian Slavery," Studien zur Indologie und Iranistik, 16-17 (1992), pp. 277-85. 3 See Slavery and Abolition, 10, 2 (1989)m pp. 270-71. 4 Black Slavery in the Americas: An Interdisciplinary Bibliography, 1865-1980 (Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press, 1982). 5 The bibliography appeared first as Slavery: A Comparative Teaching Bibliography (Waltham, Mass.: Crossroads Press, 1977) and then in annual installments in Slavery and Abolition (London: Frank Cass, vol. 1 = 1980). Materials through the 1983 supplement were corrected, consolidated, reorganized, and indexed in Joseph C. Miller, Slavery: A Worldwide Bibliography, 1900-1982 (White Plains, N.Y.: Kraus International, 1985). The full 1983 supplement (with Larissa V. Brown) appeared in Slavery and Abolition, 4, 2 (1983), pp. 163-208 (Part I), and 4, 3 (1983), pp. 232-74 (Part II), including unverifiable references accumulated to that date. "Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1984)" and "Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1985)" (both with James V. Skalnik), and "Slavery: Current Bibliographical Supplement (1986)" and "Slavery: Current Bibliographical Supplement (1987)" (both with David F. Appleby) appeared in Slavery and Abolition, 6, 1 (1985), pp. 59-92; 7, 3 (1986), pp. 315-88; 8, 3 (1987), pp. 353-86; and 9, 2 (1988), pp. 207-45. "Slavery: Current Bibliographical Supplement (1988)" (with Randolph C. Head) is in 10, 2 (1988), pp. 231-71, "Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1989)" (with Jena R. Gaines) is in 11, 2 (1990), pp. 251-308, and "Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1990)" and "Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1991)" (both with Randolph C. Head) are in 12, 3 (1991), pp. 259-312, and 13, 3 (1992), pp. 244-315. Full "annual" versions, including retrospective searches, of the abridged "current" supplements for 1986, 1987, and 1988 were also prepared in manuscript ("Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement [1986]," "Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement [1987]," and "Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement [1988]"). 5 In the early days, the project benefited from the attentions of Alicia Cole, William Hoest, Emilie Inman, Jennifer James, Brenda Nelms, and John Stephens. Thomas Robisheaux, Ann Parrella, Kate Murphy, and Robin Good joined in expanding the scale of operations to a higher order of magnitude in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Daniel H. Borus and Larissa V. Brown brought levels of expertise far beyond the usual responsibilities of a research assistant, in locating new references and contributing research procedures in a fully professional manner between 1980 and 1983, the date of the previous major consolidation and publication of the full set of materials. Their names appeared as collaborators in the annual bibliographical supplements published in Slavery and Abolition. James V. Skalnik worked on the mature project for two years, and he was followed by David F. Appleby for two more years, and then by Randolph C. Head and Jena R. Gaines, who more than competently maintained the prevailing standards during the remainder of the 1980s. Randy Head returned in 1991 and 1992 and became an essential, indeed principal, contributor to the present new consolidation. Without his collaboration, I would not be keying this introduction today. He has ventured with unfailing enthusiasm and precision into whole new areas and has worked through the sustained re-ordering and checking that have been necessary to pull a previous collection of 5,117 entries and nine annual supplements into the 10,351 entries presented here in largely coherent and consistent form. He leaves the project substantially completed, and with a formal manual of search procedures to which his successors will be indebted for as many years as supplements continue to be prepared. Thanks, heartfelt thanks, are owing to all of these individuals, and particularly to Randy Head. I hope that the familiarity that the project has brought them with many publications throughout numerous fields of history during their years as students at Virginia will prove an enduring contribution to the professional careers in which they are now engaged, and to a perspective on their respective specialties broadened to a world scale. The publishers of Slavery and Abolition, Frank Cass Ltd., London, and the editors, John Ralph Willis, Gad Heuman, and James Walvin, have been generous in allowing us to use materials published first in the supplements appearing in their pages. A certain proportion of these entries has, of course, been corrected and revised in the present compilation. I am grateful for their permission. And then there are the many colleagues, specialists in the study of slavery and the slave trade for the most part, who have guided me into unfamiliar fields as the bibliography grew. David Henige encouraged me to publish the first compilation in 1977, and he has since then consistently allowed me to benefit from the unparalleled range and thoroughness of his knowledge of history. Robert Ross joined early on in the effort and still contributes materials on slavery at the Cape of Good Hope. Roderick and Jean Barman shared some of the fruits of their researches on behalf of the Handbook of Latin American Studies. James C. Armstrong, of the staff of the Library of Congress, virtually created the present sections on the Indian Ocean and brought local African publications to my attention over many years; he has now moved to a new base in Rio de Janeiro, but he has not ceased to send his regular packets of photocopied title pages and tables of contents. From Brazil, Horácio Gutiérrez became a regular correspondent, and from there and from the United States so also did Mary C. Karasch. Wim Hoogbergen corrected and expanded the sections on the Dutch Caribbean and on the slave trade of the Dutch reproduced here. Over the years, dozens of others have brought references to my attention, provided details of edited collections in advance of publication, and verified materials beyond my reach; they are named each year in the supplements published in Slavery and Abolition. I here repeat my expression of appreciation to all for their contributions. 6 The Department of History and the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the University provided the financial resources that launched the bibliographical research, and the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American and African Studies has been consistently generous each year since 1980 in providing funds that have supported my student research assistants. I am proud to have been able to further the scholarly and teaching purposes of the Woodson Institute through the compilation of these bibliographies. The Research Resources Program of the National Endowment for the Humanities provided the grant that, in 1982 and 1983, allowed us nearly to double the size of the bibliography at that time and to pursue verification of its contents in most of the major American university libraries east of the Mississippi River. If they did not already have their -- it often seems substantial -- rewards, I would also thank Dr. Wang, Bill Gates, Thomas Watson, and other pioneers in the modern personal computer industry for the electronic wonders that make it possible to conceive of project like this one, never mind to bring it to its present state of finish. As it is, I am more than pleased to thank the associates with whom I have worked and who have converted me to the machines, instructed me in their potential, and labored long and hard at their own desks to produce the copy that follows. My son, John, supported by his sisters Julie and Laura, has nudged me toward the facility with this technology that their generation takes for granted. The capable and dedicated staff of the Corcoran Department of History at the University of Virginia literally made the first published compilation in 1983, and Lottie McCauley and Ella Wood found the stamina to return to this larger version of the project, integrating 5000 new entries into the text of their earlier effort, devising procedures to clean up and number the resulting list, and preparing the index of authors and editors. Over in the word-processing center of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Gail Moore, supported by Judy Birckhead, solved problem after problem with unfailing patience and then produced the final pages, as published here. I am fortunate to have been a beneficiary of the efficiency, dispatch, and thorough-going professionalism that these fine associates contribute to scholarship at the University. Errors remain. At the present writing, I cannot say where they may lurk, as I have corrected all that I can find, but I have come to accept the fact that they will be there, even after verification by direct inspection (or from standard library bibliographical reference tools) of all entries not marked with an asterisk (*) and repeated proof-readings through several pairs of eyes. Of course, none of the above, nor are any of my collaborators, to bear the slightest responsibility for these mistakes. Users are invited to notify me of slips that attract their attention, and particularly of publications not listed; I would, I suppose, prefer to hear fully and personally about my sins of omission and commission, but critics have an obligation to alert potential users to the strengths and weaknesses of the collection in print, and I expect to learn of some of them in that way. Charlottesville Virginia January 1993 7 INTRODUCTION THIS BIBLIOGRAPHY has changed in scope and purpose as it has grown, from an initial working bibliography for a course taught at the University of Virginia, to a general comparative teaching bibliography of some 1645 entries published in 1977, and to what I then thought was a reasonably comprehensive research bibliography of 5117 works in 1983. The current compilation, 10,351 items, represents a fuller, though no doubt still incomplete, reference guide to twentieth-century writings on slavery and the slave trade in most parts of the world, though about 1991. Its growth represents only in part my growing awareness of the pervasiveness of slavery and slaving throughout human history.6 Its current scale, approaching indigestibility in the larger regional categories of the listings and in some of the concepts indexed, is also a product of the enormous fascination that the subject has held for modern scholars in general, and particularly for the nearly 5900 of them who have focused their writing sufficiently on the subject to meet the definition of coverage employed here. Freedom, as highlighted in a masterly new interpretation by Orlando Patterson, has been fundamental in the Making of Western Culture, and slavery may lie at the genesis of the profoundly influential notion that individuals have rights, autonomy, and dignity independent of their fellow or their gods.7 Enslavement seems to lie close to the heart of what has made us who we are. In recent years, historians and others have contributed several hundred publications on the subject each year, and the stream shows no signs of abating as scholars continue to reveal the unsuspected prominence of slaves in every part of the world. Medieval and early modern Europe and the remote interior of nineteenth-century southern Africa come to mind as current examples; a generation ago, some were surprised, and even distressed, to learn that Greek civilization had been based, at least in some respects, on slave labor.8 Scholars have also continued to probe new aspects of enslavement in areas where its presence has long been acknowledged, and where it has seemed familiar. As one example since the last compilation of this bibliography, the distinctive experience of female slaves has attracted the attention of scholars; the 1985 bibliography contained 38 references in the index listing for "Women", a significant portion of those from a single new collection of papers on women slaves in Africa9, but the current index identifies 153 works and a half dozen additional related categories. A new wave of work concerned to elicit the meanings of living under, or with, slavery has replaced the structural preoccupations, marxist, neomarxist, economic, and anthropological, of scholars in the 1970s and early 1980s. These new interests have also led to a growing awareness of the essential historicity of slavery, of its inherent and even necessary tendency to change through time as populations of immigrant, raw captives built up and began to work out accommodations with those who held them in bondage and, in most cases, also to move out of slavery and into other forms 6 For a recent and comprehensive survey, see Orlando Patterson, Slavery and Social Death: A Comparative Study (Cambridge, Ma.: Harvard University Press, 1982). 7 New York: Basic Books, 1991. 8 Moses I. Finley, Ancient Slavery and Modern Ideology (New York: Viking Press, 1980). 9 Claire C. Robertson and Martin A. Klein, eds., Women and Slavery in Africa (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1983). 8 of dependency. Ancient historians have moved courageously beyond the close technical studies long characteristic of their field to attempt broad-ranging, and carefully documented, interpretations10; they have also produced useful historiographical interpretations.11 Archaeologists have turned their research tools to the examination of differences in the lives of masters and slaves on New World plantations.12 We have important syntheses, often the culmination of years of work as scholars have matured with the field to which they contribute, in other fields not previously visible other than in scattered details.13 Slavery remains fascinating and thus subject to the application of new techniques and to the ongoing evolution of intellectual concerns in many disciplines. Definition of coverage This bibliography includes the same range of works as all previous compilations: secondary scholarly works, written from the perspective of any academic discipline, reflecting directly on slavery or on the slave trade anywhere in the world and published in Western European languages. Given the rarity, and increasingly so, of slavery in the modern world, most of the works are historical, though ranging within that discipline from legal history through formal demographic analysis to political and intellectual history. Economics, political economy, sociology, and -- another recent development -anthropology are well represented. The humanities, philosophy, linguistics, and literary criticism, are less common, though the new concerns with meaning have made them more prominent of late. "Direct reflection on slavery or the slave trade" has been judged according to arbitrary, but reasonably consistent, criteria: sufficient prominence in the work to merit reference in its title. This definition deliberately excludes such closely related subjects as freedmen (except in relation to the slave society in which they lived), general histories of sugar in the New World, the sociology of inequality in general, the history of most African states before the modern era, debt bondage, race relations, British politics of abolition, the history of Brazilian colonial cities, the U. S. Civil War, and so on. The ubiquity of slavery 10 E.g. Yvon Garlan, Les esclaves en Grèce ancienne (Paris, 1982) (translated as Slavery in Ancient Greece [Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1988]); Ellen Meiksins Wood, Peasant-Citizen and Slave: The Foundations of Athenian Democracy (London: Verso, 1988); Keith R. Bradley, Slaves and Masters in the Roman Empire: An Exercise in Social Control (Brussels: Latomus, 1984); Moses I. Finley, ed., Classical Slavery, special issue of Slavery and Abolition, 8, 1 (1987), and also London: Frank Cass, 1988. 11 Thomas E. J. Wiedemann, Slavery (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987). 12 Theresa A. Singleton, ed., The Archaeology of Slavery and Plantation Life (New York: Academic Press, 1985); Charles E. Orser, ed., "Bibliography Of Slave And Plantation Archaeology," Slavery and Abolition, forthcoming. 13 William D. Phillips, Jr., Slavery from Roman Times to the Early Transatlantic Trade (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1985); Robin Blackburn, The Overthrow of Colonial Slavery, 1776-1848 (London: Verso, 1988); David Eltis, Economic Growth and the Ending of the Transatlantic Slave Trade (New York: Oxford University Press, 1987); Ruth Mazo Karras, Slavery and Society in Medieval Scandinavia (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1988); Bernard Lewis, Race and Slavery in the Middle East: An Historical Enquiry (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990); Murray Gordon, Slavery in the Arab World (New York: New Amsterdam, 1989); John B. Boles, Black Southerners 1619-1689 (Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1983); Herbert S. Klein, African Slavery in Latin America and the Caribbean (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986); for Africa, see Paul E. Lovejoy, Transformations in Slavery: A History of Slavery in Africa (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1983) and Patrick Manning, Slavery and African Life: Occidental, Oriental, and African Slave Trades (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1990). For the United States there is also a historiographical study: Peter J. Parish, Slavery: History and Historians (New York: Harper and Row, 1989). 9 in world history means that a less restrictive definition would expand the coverage uncontrollably. The bibliography covers all scholarly publication formats except for short reviews of books on the subject and the portions of larger works by single authors focused on the subject. Thus, a chapter on slave labor in a book devoted to agricultural history in the American South would not appear here. But substantial reviews and review-essays, unpublished conference papers, encyclopedia articles of more than routine significance, articles in scholarly periodicals, popular historical magazines, and serious journalism, chapters in multi-authored edited collections, and books and monographs all are included. Translations and reprints14 are included, in indented format under the entries for the original publications. Primary sources are not listed, except for slave testimonies, memoires, and narratives (and a few others15) printed with substantial modern introductions and scholarly apparatus. This exclusion is an intended effect of the bibliography's starting date of 1900; the era of slavery had ended, at least nominally, in most parts of the world by the beginning of the twentieth century, and so the first-hand recollections of people who observed it date from that earlier time when enslavement figured so widely in human experience. Works in Arabic and other Asian and African languages, and a large body of important scholarship in Slavic tonques (Russian, Polish, Hungarian, etc.) do not appear, and the listed works in Western European languages on the parts of the world where these languages are spoken seldom give more than introductory coverage to these sometimes important literatures. It is hoped that, in spite of these restrictions, the bibliography will offer access, seldom at more than one remove, to the full range of related works and primary sources relevant to investigation of slavery in most parts of the world through the footnotes and bibliographies of the studies listed. Organization of listings The bibliography divides works according to geographical, and/or political and cultural, groupings of the enslavers. Thus "black slavery" in the Americas, or throughout the world, that is, the slaves categorized by their racial or geographical origin, is dispersed through the European national categories of the section (XI) on the slave trade and the several sections on slavery in the New World -- North America (English colonies and United States - II), the mainland Spanish possessions (III), Brazil (or Portuguese America, IV), and the Caribbean (subdivided by colonizing power, including Spain - V). English, Portuguese, and Spanish enslavement of Native Americans is distributed through the same set of categories but may be located through the Subject Index entry for "Native Americans". 14 Particularly for the United States, the massive collection edited by Paul Finkelman, Articles on American Slavery (New York: Garland, 1989); listed under individual volume titles. See also Darlene Clark Hine, ed. Black Women in American History from Colonial Times through the Nineteenth Century (4 vols.) (Brooklyn: Carlson Publishing Co., 1990). 15 E.g. John Gabriel Stedman, Narrative of a Five Years Expedition Against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam (originally published 1796), new ed. by Richard Price and Sally Price (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988). 10 The section on "Africa" (VI) thus contains entries focused on enslavement by (as well as of, but incidentally for the purposes of assigning entries to this section) Africans, in Africa. The subsections on Asia (in Section X, "Other") include studies on the institutions of slavery there, but enslaved Asians may be found among the people of varying origins held by the Dutch at the Cape of Good Hope (VI.2) and by the French and English in the islands of the Indian Ocean (X.7), together with the corresponding subsections of the listings for the Slave Trade (XI.11). In spite of a certain logical inconsistency, the historical/cultural distinction of "Muslim" has been given precedence over the otherwise regional division (in Section VII), so that the Islamic portions of India and sub-Saharan Africa will be found there along with all of southwestern Asia and northern Africa since the eighth century. The Native Americans who held slaves are found among the "others" of the bibliography in Section X.6. No relegation of these people to the peripheries of an implicitly euro-centric vision of the history of the world is implied by this designation (there are "other" European enslavers, too, in the Caribbean and in North America and in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, sections II.10, V.10, IX.9), but the prominence of the Europeans, and the creators of "western civilization" in Greece and Rome among the slavers of the world, and the overwhelming predominance of the writing about them, provides a certain analytical and historical rationale for placing them at the logical center of the organization of the bibliography. Where anomalies arise from this organization I have tried to design index entries that will guide users to works related to interests incorporated in the architecture of the listings but located -- inevitably with more than a touch of arbitrariness -- in other sections. Distinctions between slavery in a given region and the slave trade supporting it there are often particularly obscure, particularly in fields where authors routinely join the two under such titles as "Slavery and the Slave Trade in Cuba" or " ... in South Carolina" " ... at the Cape of Good Hope". Users are advised to consult the Subject Index, where entries under "Trade: South Carolina" and second entries following a geographical entry ("Jamaica: trade") indicate the placement of such works. Works on slavery within Africa during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries may fall within the section on "Africa" or in the subsection on the effects of the Atlantic trade on Africa (XI.13), depending on my sense for the emphasis placed by the authors of particular works on the disputed issue of the extent to which the Europeans, or the world economy, were responsible for the "transformations in slavery" there at that time.16 Hardly less distinct is the line that divides the "trade in Africa" (XI.14) from the various streams in the Atlantic, Indian Ocean, and Saharan trades that it also fed.17 Within the geographical sections, the bibiography lists works in alphabetical order according to primary authors. By this criterion, a volume of miscellaneous collected essays is unlikely to appear as such, even though it may include works on slavery, owing to the fact that it does not focus as a whole on the subject of the bibliography.18 Even a set of essays by a single author on subjects related to (but distinguished from) slavery does not appear.19 However, an entire volume of essays focused specifically on slavery or the slave 16 Lovejoy, Transformations in Slavery. 17 Manning, Slavery and African Life. 18 E.g. Christine Bolt and Seymour Drescher, eds., Anti-Slavery, Religion, and Reform: Essays in Memory of Roger Anstey (Folkestone: William Dawson, 1980), though it contains the essay included (no. 171) on "Slavery and 'Progress'" by David Brion Davis. 19 Sidney Mintz, Caribbean Transformations (Chicago: Aldine, 1974), but see relevant essays, e.g. no. 539. 11 trade, by various contributors, receives an independent listing under the name(s) of the editor(s), and each of the studies in the volume also receives a separate listing under its own author. The strongly comparative tone of the field, the diverse research skills needed for work in it, and the geographical dispersion of sources and subjects have made conferences (and later published proceedings) and edited collections of studies by specialists common and important in this field; such volumes have in fact often marked key advances in scholarly understanding of it.20 In such cases, the participating authors are named in indented notes under the main entry, to guide users to the separate full listing of their contributions; in cases where the regional section of the bibliography in which the works have been listed is not obvious, users may work through the Author Index to locate them. Articles published in scholarly journals appear under the names of their authors; only in a very few instances, where entire serials have been devoted to the subject of slavery and the slave trade, have journal titles been listed as such. Institutions as issuing authorities have been avoided as much as possible, though a few (archives, and so on) do appear. The majority of the entries consists in books and monographs listed straightforwardly by author, with works of single authorship given first, single editorships following, and joint authorships (and then editorships) given in alphabetical order of the secondary authors' last names.21 The format is the entries is historical (or, according to the standards of the Modern Language Association) and roughly in conformity with U.S. Library of Congress cataloguing rules. It includes substantial detail (issue numbers within volumes of serials, frequently the names of monograph series, dates and places of conferences for published proceedings, and the like), so that users accustomed to other systems elsewhere in the world will be likely to encounter some element of the citation that gives access to available holdings of it through local conventions, or even directly from publishers. My assumption is that non-specialists will be making use of the bibliography, and I have therefore not employed abbreviations often common within the fields in which scholars work (e.g. HAHR for the Hispanic American Historical Review, JAH, for the Journal of American History or the Journal of African History, RIDA for the Revue internationale des droits de l'antiquité, or RFHOM for the Revue française d'histoire d-outre-mer). Entries appear in the language of publication, except in a few cases of titles in Russian, Polish, or other non-westernEuropean languages published with summaries titled in French, German, or English, etc. These are indicated explicitly as such. There are a few transliterations from Arabic, Greek, or Cyrillic or other non-Roman alphabets; these may vary from conventions preferred by some specialists. In a very few instances, they have simply been replaced by ellipses. 20 A current example is Ira Berlin and Philip D. Morgan, eds., Cultivation and Culture: Labor and the Making of Slave Life in the Americas (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1993). But see also, among the many works in this category, Moses I. Finley, ed., Slavery in Classical Antiquity: Views and Controversies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1960); Suzanne Miers and Igor Kopytoff, eds., Slavery in Africa: Historical and Anthropological Perspectives (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1977); Pieter C. Emmer, Jean Mettas, and Jean-Claude Nardin, eds., La traite des noirs par l'Atlantique: nouvelles approaches (Paris: Société française d'histoire d'outre-mer, 1975); W. Gervase Clarence-Smith, ed., The Economics of the Indian Ocean Slavery Trade in the Nineteenth Century (London: Frank Cass, 1989); James L. Watson, ed., Asian and African Systems of Slavery (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1980); Anthony Reid, ed., Slavery, Bondage, and Dependency in Southeast Asia (St. Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1983); Utsa Patnaik and Manjari Dingwaney, eds., Chains of Servitude: Bondage and Slavery in India (Madras: Sangham Books, 1985); Martin A. Klein, ed., Breaking the Chains: Slavery, Bondage and Emancipation in Africa and Asia (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, forthcoming). These examples are far from exhausting the category. 21 Examples of such sequences may be found in nos. 294-303 (Eugene D. Genovese), 1078-86 (Robert W. Fogel), nos. 4693-4711 (Jerome S. Handler), nos. 5375-5141 (Gabriel Debien), and elsewhere. Additional joint authorships and editorships will, of course, be found through the Author Index; a leading example of a widely active second author and editor, with relatively few primary listings is Stanley L. Engerman. 12 BIBLIOGRAPHY I. GENERAL AND COMPARATIVE 1. Abbas, Mohammed Galal. “Slavery between Islam and Western Civilization - A Comparative Study of Attitudes,” Majallat al-Azhar, 43, 9 (1971), pp. 11-16; 43, 10 (1971), pp. 9-13. 2. Abd al-Wahid, Ali. Contribution à une théorie sociologique de l’esclavage: étude des situations génératrices de l’esclavage avec appendice sur l’esclavage de la femme et bibliographie critique (with preface by Paul Fauconnet). Paris: A. Mechelinck, 1931. 3. Abignente, Giovanni. Schiavitù nei suoi rapporti colla chiesa e col laicato: studio storico giuridico. Rome: L’Erma di Bretschneider, 1972. 4. The African Diaspora: Africans and their Descendants in the Wider World to 1800. (Reader) Written and edited by The Black Diaspora Committee of Howard University. Lexington, Mass.: Ginn Press, 1986. For contents see Abir, Austen, Craton, Evans, Fage, Foner, Hallewell, Hunwick, H. Klein, Levine, Lovejoy, Muhammad, Nash, Pike, and Vallejos. 5. Agate, Leonard D. “Slavery (Christian),” in James Hastings, ed., Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics (New York: Scribners, 1921), vol. 11, pp. 602-12. 6. Agi, S. P. I. “Slavery, Slave Trade and the Development of European Capitalism” (Unpublished paper, World Conference on Slavery and Society in History, Ahmadu Bello University, Kaduna, Nigeria, 26-30 March 1990). 7. Akiwowo, Akinsola. “Racialism and Shifts in the Mental Orientation of Black People in West Africa and the Americas, 1856-1956,” Phylon, 31, 3 (l970), pp. 256-64. 8. Alexander, Herbert B. “Brazilian and United States Slavery Compared,” Journal of Negro History, 7, 4 (1922), pp. 349-64. 9. Allen, Theodore W. “Slavery, Racism, and Democracy,” Monthly Review, 29, 10 (1978), pp. 57-63. 10. Allen, Theodore W. “‘... They would have Destroyed Me’: Slavery and the Origins of Racism,” Radical America, 9, 3 (1975), pp. 41-63. Reprinted separately as “Class Struggle and the Origin of Racial Slavery: The Invention of the White Race” (Hoboken, N.J., 1975). 11. Alonso Olea, Manuel. De la servidumbre al contrato de trabalho. Madrid: Tecnos, 1979. Translated as Von der Hörigkeit zum Arbeitsvertrag (trans. Aurelio and Irene Fuentes Rojos) (Heidelberg: Verlagsgesellschaft Recht und Wirtschaft, 1981). 12. Amia, Amerigo d’. Schiavitù romana e servitù medievale. Milan: U. Hoepli, 1931. 13. Amodio, C. Robertazzi. “La tratta dei negri e la schiavitù moderna: aspetti della storiografia contemporanea,” in Sichirollo, ed., Schiavitù antica e moderna, pp. 251-81. 13 14. Andersen, Øivind, ed. Slaveri og avvikling i et komparativt perspektiv. Trondheim: Reprosentralen, 1983. (Rapport fra et seminar i Trondheim, mai 1983). For contents see Andersen, Green-Pedersen, Holm, Huttunen, Iversen, Kvium, Mörner, O’Fahey, Qviller, Skydsgaard, Stang, and Tvarnø. 15. Andrews, George Reid. “Comparing Emancipations: A Review Essay (of Berlin, et al., Freedom, Fields, Slavery and Freedom on the Middle Ground, Foner, Nothing but Freedom, Litwack, Been in the Storm So Long, Rodney, History of the Guyanese Working People),” Journal of Social History, 20, 3 (1987), pp. 565-83. 16. Annequin, Jacques. “Comparatisme/comparaisons: ressemblances et hétérogénéité des formes d’exploitation esclavagistes: quelques réflexions,” Dialogues d’histoire ancienne, 11 (1985), pp. 639-72. 17. Anstey, Roger T. “Capitalism and Slavery - A Critique,” in Centre of African Studies, University of Edinburgh, Transatlantic Slave Trade, pp. 13-29. With discussion, pp. 33-43. Reprinted Economic History Review, 21, 2 (1968), pp. 307-20. 18. Anstey, Roger T. “Religion and British Slave Emancipation,” in Walvin and Eltis, eds., Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade, pp. 37-62. 19. Anstey, Roger T. “Slavery and the Protestant Ethic,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 6, 1 (1979), pp. 157-72. Commentaries by Emilia Viotti da Costa (pp. 173-76) and David Brion Davis (pp. 177-82). 20. Anthony, Carl. “The Big House and the Slave Quarters, Part II: African Contributions to the New World,” Landscape, 21, 1 (1976), pp. 9-15. 21. Anti-Slavery Reporter and Aborigines’ Friend. 22. Anti-Slavery Society for the Protection of Human Rights. Annual Reports. 23. Aptheker, Bettina. “Bibliographical Comment (on Herbert Aptheker),” in Okihiro, ed., In Resistance, pp. 210-20. 24. Aptheker, Herbert. “Resistance and Afro-American History: Some Notes on Contemporary Historiography and Suggestions for Future Research,” in Okihiro, ed., In Resistance, pp. 10-20. 25. Archer, Léonie J. “Introduction,” to Archer, ed., Slavery and Other Forms of Unfree Labour, pp. 1-18. 26. Archer, Léonie J., ed. Slavery and Other Forms of Unfree Labour. London: Routledge, 1988. (History Workshop Series, Oxford, 1985) For contents see Archer, Blackburn, Burdon, Cartledge, Cheung-Judge, de Ste. Croix, Ellis, Harvey, Heuman, Jackson, James, Johnson, Knight, Nicholls, Sobel, Tadman, Twaddle, and Wiles. 27. Ashley Montagu, M. F. “The African Origins of the American Negro and His Ethnic Composition,” Scientific Monthly, 58, 1 (1944), pp. 58-65. 14 28. Assunção, Matthias Röhrig. “L’adhésion populaire aux projects révolutionnaires dans les sociétés esclavagistes: le cas du Venezuela et du Brésil (1780-1840),” Caravelle (Cahiers du monde hispanique et luso-brésilien), 54 (1990), pp. 291-313. 29. Aufhauser, R. Keith. “Slavery and Technological Change,” Journal of Economic History, 34, 1 (1974), pp. 36-50. 30. Austen, Ralph A. “How Unique is the New World Plantation? Estate Agriculture in Three Slave Economies,” in Daget, ed., De la traite à l’esclavage, vol. 1, pp. 55-71. 31. Austen, Ralph A., and Woodruff D. Smith. “Private Tooth Decay as Public Economic Virtue: The Slave-Sugar Triangle, Consumerism, and European Industrialization,” Social Science History, 14, 1 (1990), pp. 95-115. Reprinted in Inikori and Engerman, eds., Atlantic Slave Trade, pp. 183-203. 32. Awad, Mohamed. Report on Slavery. New York: United Nations, 1966. 33. Aykroyd, W. R. Sweet Malefactor: Sugar, Slavery, and Human Society. London: Heinemann, 1967. 34. *Babson, David W. “Racism and Ethnicity: Contexts for the Societies Investigated by Historical Archaeology” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Baltimore, 1989). 35. *Babson, David W. “The White Side of the Plantation: Observing Ideology Through Archaeology” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Savannah, 1987). 36. Backhaus, Wilhelm. Marx, Engels und die Sklaverei: zur ökonomischen Problematik der Unfreiheit. Dusseldorf: Pädagogischer Verlag Schwann, 1974. 37. Bailey, Dale S. “Slavery in the Novels of Brazil and the United States: A Comparison” (PhD diss., Indiana University, 1961). 38. Bailey, Ronald. “Africa, the Slave Trade and the Rise of Industrial Capitalism in Europe and the United States: A Historiographic Review,” American History: A Bibliographical Review, 2 (1986), pp. 1-91. 39. *Bailey, Ronald W. “Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Critique of Scholarly Efforts to Negate the Slave Trade’s Economic Contribution to Europe/U.S.” (Unpublished paper, National Council for Black Studies, Cornell University, 1985). 40. *Bailey, Ronald W. “The Slave Trade’s Contribution to the Development of Capitalism (Europe/U.S.): A Critique and Alternative Formulation” (Unpublished paper, University of Wisconsin African Studies Program, Madison, 1983). 41. Baks, C., J. C. Breman, and A. T. J. Nooij. “Slavery as a System of Production in Tribal Society,” Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land-, en Volkenkunde van Nederlandsche-Indië, 122, 1 (1966), pp. 90-109. 42. Banton, Michael. “1960: A Turning Point in the Study of Race Relations,” Daedalus, 103, 2 (1974), pp. 31-44. 43. Banton, Michael. “Of Inhuman Bondage (review essay: Patterson, Slavery and Social Death),” Times Literary Supplement, no. 4197 (9 Sept. 1983), p. 947. 15 44. Barbosa, Luiz C. “Manumission in Brazil and Surinam: The Role of Dutch Hegemony and Decline in the Capitalist World-Economy,” Ethnic and Racial Studies, 10, 3 (1987), pp. 349-65. 45. Barcía, María del Carmen. “Algunas cuestiones teóricas necesarias para el análisis del surgimiento y la crisis de la plantación esclavista,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí (Havana), 22, 3 (1980), pp. 53-88. 46. Barker, Anthony. African Link: British Attitudes to the Negro in the Era of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1550-1807. Totowa, N.J.: Rowman and Littlefield, 1978. 47. Barnard, Henry. Slavery: A Bibliography and Union List of the Microform Collection. Sanford, N.C.: Microfilming Corporation of America, 1980. 48. Barzel, Yoram. “An Economic Analysis of Slavery,” Journal of Law and Economics, 20, 1 (1977), pp. 87-110. 49. Bastide, Roger. Les Amériques noires, les civilisations africaines dans le Nouveau Monde. Paris: Payot, 1967. Translated as African Civilizations in the New World (New York: Harper and Row, 1971). 50. Bateman, Rebecca B. “Africans and Indians: A Comparative Study of the Black Carib and Black Seminole,” Ethnohistory, 37, 1 (1990), pp. 1-24. 51. Bazemo, M. “Rites de passage et d’intégration des captifs dans l’ancien royaume du Yatenga: essai d’approche comparative,” Dialogues d’histoire ancienne (Special issue: “Hommage à Ettore Lepore”), 15, 2 (1989), pp. 375-98. 52. Bean, Richard N., and Robert P. Thomas. “The Adoption of Slave Labor in British America,” in Gemery and Hogendorn, eds., Uncommon Market, pp. 377-98. 53. *Becker, Charles. “Les traites négrières et l’esclavage (review essay: Gordon, Esclavage dans le monde arabe, Meyer, Esclaves et négriers, Meillassoux, Anthropologie de l’esclavage, Miller, Slavery: A Worldwide Bibliography, Rodney, Et l’Europe sous-développa l’Afrique, SalaMolins, Code Noir, Thesée, Ibos de l’Amélie),” Psychopathologie africaine (forthcoming). 54. Beckles, Hilary McD. “Down but Not Out: Eric Williams’ ‘Capitalism and Slavery’ After Nearly 40 Years of Criticism,” Bulletin of Eastern Caribbean Affairs, 10, 4 (1984), pp. 2936. 55. Beckles, Hilary McD. “‘The Williams Effect’: Eric Williams’s Capitalism and Slavery and the Growth of West Indian Political Economy,” in Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery, pp. 303-16. 56. Beeman, Richard R. “Labor Forces and Race Relations: A Comparative View of the Colonization of Brazil and Virginia,” Political Science Quarterly, 86, 4 (1971), pp. 609-36. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (1-28). 57. Begot, Danielle. “Esclavagisme et anti-esclavagisme (1794-1886),” Revue du CERC (Centre d’études et de recherches caraïbéennes, Université des Antilles - Guyane), 5 (1988), pp. 27-39. 16 58. Beiguelman, Paula. “The Destruction of Modern Slavery: A Theoretical Issue,” Review, 2, 1 (1978), pp. 71-80. 59. Bell, Rudolf. “A escravidão como um investimento: dólares e seres humanos,” in Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro, coord., Trabalho escravo, economia, e sociedade: Conferência sobre história e ciências sociais, UNICAMP (Rio de Janeiro: Paz e Terra, 1983), pp. 9-25. With commentaries by Carlos A. Hasenbalg, pp. 29-33, Fernando A. Novais, pp. 33-34, Peter Eisenberg, pp. 34-37, and response, pp. 37-40. 60. Belle, Jacques. Les humiliés: petite histoire de l’esclavage. Neuchâtel: Nouvelle Bibliothèque, 1965. 61. [Aguirre] Beltrán, Gonzalo. “African Influences in the Development of Regional Culture in the New World,” in Pan American Union, Seminar on Plantation Systems of the New World (Washington, D.C.: Pan American Union, 1959), pp. 64-72. With comment by René Ribeiro. (Social Science Monographs, no. 7) Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-23. Translated as “Influencias africanas en el desarrollo de las culturas regionales del Nuevo Mundo,” in Sistemas de plantaciones en el Nuevo Mundo (Washington, D.C.: Pan American Union, 1960), pp. 71-81. 62. Benzinger, I. “Slavery,” in T. K. Cheyne and J. Sutherland Black, eds., Encyclopaedia biblica (London: Macmillan, 1903), vol. 4, cols. 4653-58. 63. *Beozzo, José Oscar. “As Américas negras e a história da igreja: questões metodológicas,” Religião e sociedade (Rio de Janeiro), 18 (1982), pp. 65-82. Reprinted in Commissão de Estudos de História da Igreja na América Latina (CEHILA), Escravidão negra e história da Igreja na América Latina e no Caribe (trans. Luiz Carlos Nishiura) (Petrópolis: Vozes, 1987), pp. 27-64. 64. Bergad, Laird W. “Slavery and its Legacies (review essay: Tella, Rebelion de esclavos de Haiti, Kiple, Caribbean Slave, Paquette, Sugar is Made with Blood, Plant, Sugar and Modern Slavery, Reynolds, Stand the Storm, Price and Price, eds., (Stedman) Narrative of a Five-Year Expedition, and Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery),” Latin American Research Review, 25, 3 (1990), pp. 199-213. 65. Berghe, Pierre L. van den. Race and Racism: A Comparative Perspective. New York: Wiley, 1967. 66. Bergstrom, T. “Of the Existence and Optimality of Competitive Equilibrium for a Slave Economy,” Review of Economic Studies, 38, 113 (1971), pp. 23-36. 67. Berlin, Ira. “The Development of Plantation Systems and Slave Societies: A Commentary - II,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 68-71. 68. Berlin, Ira, and Philip D. Morgan. “Introduction: Labor and the Shaping of Slave Life in the Americas,” to Berlin and Morgan, Cultivation and Culture, pp. 1-46. 69. Berlin, Ira, and Philip D. Morgan. “Introduction,” to Berlin and Morgan, eds., The Slaves’ Economy, pp. 1-27. (Also Slavery and Abolition, 12, 1 [1991]) 17 70. Berlin, Ira, and Philip D. Morgan, eds. Cultivation and Culture: Labor and the Shaping of Slave Life in the Americas. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1993. For contents see Berlin and Morgan, Campbell, Dunn, Gaspar, Geggus, Marshall, McDonald, Miller, Reidy, Tomich, Trouillot, and Walsh. 71. Berlin, Ira, and Philip D. Morgan, eds. The Slaves’ Economy: Independent Production by Slaves in the Americas. London: Cass, 1991. Also as special issue of Slavery and Abolition, 12, 1 (1991). For contents see Beckles, Berlin and Morgan, Campbell, Marshall, McDonald, Price, Schlotterbeck, Tomich, and Turner. 72. Bernhard, Virginia. “Beyond the Chesapeake: The Contrasting Status of Blacks in Bermuda, 1616-1663,” Journal of Southern History, 54, 4 (1988), pp. 545-64. 73. Biezunska-Malowist, Iza. “Les recherches sur l’esclavage ancien et le mouvement abolitionniste européen,” in J. Burian and L. Vidman, eds., Antiquitas Graeco-Romana ac Tempora nostra (Prague: Academia, 1968), pp. 161-67. 74. Biezunska-Malowist, Iza, and Marian Malowist. “La procréation des esclaves comme source de l’esclavage: quelques observations sur l’esclavage dans l’antiquité au moyen-âge, et au cours des temps modernes,” in Mélanges offerts à Kazimierz Michalowski (Warsaw: Panst. Wydawn Naukowe, 1966), pp. 275-80. 75. The Black Diaspora: Africans and their Descendants in the Wider World 1800 to the Present. (Reader) Written and edited by the Black Diaspora Committee of Howard University. Needham Heights, Mass.: Ginn Press, 1988. For contents see Craton, Heywood, Karasch, Kulikoff, and Socolow. 76. Blackburn, Robin. “Defining Slavery,” in Archer, ed., Slavery and Other Forms of Unfree Labour, pp. 262-79. 77. *Blackburn, Robin. The Nemesis of the Slave Power. Forthcoming. 78. Blackburn, Robin. The Overthrow of Colonial Slavery, 1776-1848. London: Verso, 1988. 79. *Blackburn, Robin. The West and the Rise of Slavery. Forthcoming. 80. Blakely, Allison. “Review Article: Slavery and Slavishness in Russia and America (Hellie, Slavery in Russia, and Kolchin, Unfree Labor),” Slavery and Abolition, 10, 1 (1989), pp. 76-86. 81. Blom, J. C. H. “Slavernij en Yankee: Nederlandse openbare meningsuitingen over de Amerikaanse burgeroorlog,” Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis, 85, 2 (1972), pp. 205-23. 82. Blyden, Edward Wilmot. “Noah’s Malediction,” Slavery and Abolition, 1, 1 (1980), pp. 18-24. 83. Boccassina, R., et al. “Formes et aspects de l’esclavage,” Annales: économies, sociétés, civilisations, 22, 6 (1967), pp. 1328-38. 84. Bonetto, Gerald M. “Tocqueville and American Slavery,” Canadian Review of American Studies, 15, 2 (1984), pp. 123-39. 18 85. Bonfanti, Giancarlo Bertieri. Schiavi, apostoli e negrieri: la schiavitù esiste anche oggi. Milan: Massimo, 1964. 86. Bonilla-Garcia, Luis. Historia de la esclavitud. Madrid: Editorial Plus-Ultra, 1961. 87. Booker, George W. (Conrad Oehlrich) The Slave Business. Scotch Plains, N.J.: Flanders Hall, 1940. 88. Boulle, Pierre H[enri]. “L’origine du racisme en Europe: quelques hypothèses,” in Daget, ed., De la traite à l’esclavage, vol. 1, pp. 535-47. 89. Bowden, Edgar. “Three Stages in the Evolution of Slavery in Pre-civilized Societies,” Behavioral Science Notes, 8 (1973), pp. 111-21. 90. Bowser, Frederick P. “The Death of Latin-American Slavery: Nineteenth Century Cuba and Brazil,” Journal of Inter-American Studies, 17, 3 (1975), pp. 350-57. 91. Brady, Terence. The Fight Against Slavery. New York: Norton, 1977. 92. Brandfon, Robert. “Specific Purposes and the General Past: Slaves and Slavery (review essay: Davis, Slave Power Conspiracy,, Genovese, World the Slaveholders Made, Starobin, Industrial Slavery in the Old South),” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 3, 2 (1972), pp. 351-62. 93. Brass, Tom. “Review Essay: Slavery Now: Unfree Labour and Modern Capitalism (Miles, Capitalism and Unfree Labour, Cohen, New Helots, Plant, Sugar and Modern Slavery, and Sawyer, Slavery in the Twentieth Century),” Slavery and Abolition, 9, 2 (1988), pp. 183-97. 94. Brathwaite, Edward K. “Commentary (Research Problems),” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 610-12. 95. Brett, Stephen Francis. “The Justification of Slavery: A Comparative Study of the Use of the Concepts of ‘Jus’ and ‘Dominium’ by Thomas Aquinas, Francisco de Vitoria and Domingo de Soto in Relationship to Slavery” (PhD diss., Carleton University, 1987). 96. Brink, Dean C. “What did Freedom Mean? The Aftermath of Slavery as Seen by Former Slaves and Former Masters in Three Societies,” Magazine of History, 4, 1 (1989), pp. 35-47. 97. Brown, Steven E. “Sexuality and the Slave Community,” Phylon, 42, 1 (1981), pp. 110. 98. Budziszewski, J. “A Whig View of Slavery, Development and the World Market,” Slavery and Abolition, 4, 3 (1983), pp. 199-213. 99. Burtt, Joseph. “Slavery in Anno Domini 1913,” Contemporary Review, 104 (1913), pp. 216-22. 100. Câmara, Evandro M. “Religion and Physical Mobility: Black Acculturative Differences in Brazil and the United States,” Ciência e trópico (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco), 12, 1 (1984), pp. 23-47. 101. Campbell, Mavis C. “The Price of Freedom: On Forms of Manumission. A Note on the Comparative Study of Slavery,” Revista/Review interamericana, 6, 2 (1976), pp. 239-52. 102. Canarella, Giorgio, and John A. Tomaske. “The Optimal Utilization of Slaves,” Journal of Economic History, 35, 3 (1975), pp. 621-29. 19 103. Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S. A Afro-americana: a escravidão no novo mundo. São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1982. 104. Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S. “La brecha campesina en el sistema esclavista,” in 2 Encuentro de historiadores latinoamericanos y del Caribe (Caracas, 1977) (“Los estudios históricos en América Latina: ponencias, acuerdos y resoluciones”) (Caracas: Universidad Central de Venezuela, Facultad de Humanidades y Educación, Escuela de Historia, 1979), vol. l, t. 2, pp. 424-33. Translated as “A brecha camponesa no sistema escravista,” in idem, Agricultura, escravido e capitalismo (Petrópolis: Vozes, 1979), pp. 133-54. 105. Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S. “Escravismo e dinâmica da população escrava nas Américas,” Estudos econômicos, 13, 1 (1983), pp. 41-54. 106. Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S. Escravo ou camponês: o protocampesinato negro nas Américas. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Brasiliense, 1987. 107. *Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S. “As estruturas agrárias da América latina na época colonial: tentativa de síntese interpretativa,” História: questões e debates (Curitiba), 4, 4 (1982), pp. 11-26. 108. Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S. “El modo de producción esclavista colonial en América,” in Carlos Sempat Assadourian, et al., Modos de producción en América Latina (Cordoba, Argentina: Cuadernos de Pasado y Presente, 1973), pp. 193-242. Also published as “O modo de produção escravista colonial na América,” in Théo Araujo Santiago, ed., América colonial: ensaios (Rio de Janeiro: Pallas, 1975), pp. 89-143. (Translated from “La Guyane française,” chap. 3.) 109. Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S. “Propriété de la terre et techniques de production dans les colonies esclavagistes de l’Amérique et des Caraïbes au XVIIIe siècle,” Cahiers des Amériques latines, 13-14 (1976), pp. 127-51. 110. Cardoso, Geraldo da Silva. Negro Slavery in the Sugar Plantations of Veracruz and Pernambuco, 1550-1680: A Comparative Study. Washington, D.C.: University Press of America, 1983. 111. “Caribbean Slavery and British Capitalism,” special issue of Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 18, 4 (1987). For contents see main entry, Solow and Engerman, eds. 112. Carrera Damas, Germán. “Flight and Confrontation,” in Manuel Moreno Fraginals, ed., Africa in Latin America: Essays on History, Culture, and Socialization (trans. Leonor Blum) (New York: Holmes and Meier, and Paris: UNESCO, 1984), pp. 23-37. 113. Carter, Dan T. “Politics and Power: Emancipation in Comparative Perspective (review essay: Foner, Nothing But Freedom),” Reviews in American History, 12, 3 (1984), pp. 393-97. 114. Cartledge, Paul A. “Rebels and Sambos in Classical Greece: A Comparative View,” Journal of Political Thought, 6, 1/2 (1985). 20 Reprinted in P. A. Cartledge and F. D. Harvey, eds., Crux: Essays Presented to G. E. M. de Ste. Croix on his 75th Birthday (Exeter: Imprint Academic, 1985), pp. 16-46. 115. Castro, Armando. “Natureza e variabilidade dos tipos de trabalho compulsório na Antigüidade e na época medieval,” Revista do Departamento de História (Belo Horizonte), no. 7 (1988), pp. 34-44. 116. Chakravarti, Uma. “Of Slavery and Patriarchy: The Mental Constructs of Enslavement (review essay: Genovese, Roll, Jordan, Roll, Lerner, Creation of Patriarchy, and Patterson, Slavery and Social Death),” Indian Historical Review, 15, 1-2 (1988-89), pp. 280-85. 117. Chapiseau, Felix. Au pays de l’esclavage. Paris: J. 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Includes reports and abstracts 21 on “Le debat autour de l’esclavage (Lara, Sainton, Bron)”, “La diffusion caraïbéenne de la révolution haïtienne (Plunelle-Uribe, Gerbeau)”, etc. 131. Commissão de Estudos de História da Igreja na América Latina (CEHILA). Escravidão negra e história da Igreja na América Latina e no Caribe (trans. Luiz Carlos Nishiura). Petrópolis: Vozes, 1987. For contents see Beozzo, Campbell, Hurbon, Lampe, Marshall, McGowan, and Sued-Badillo. 132. Confino, Michael. “Servage russe, esclavage américain (note critique) (review essay: Kolchin, Unfree Labor),” Annales: économies, sociétés, civilisations, 45, 5 (1990), pp. 1119-41. 133. Corbitt, Duvon C. “Saco’s History of Negro Slavery,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 24, 3 (1944), pp. 452-57. 134. Corrigan, Philip. “Feudal Relics or Capitalist Monuments? Notes on the Sociology of Unfree Labour,” Sociology, 11, 3 (1977), pp. 435-63. 135. Cortés Alonso, Vicenta. “Algunas ideas sobre la esclavitud y su investigación,” Bulletin de l’Institut historique belge de Rome, 44 (1974), pp. 127-44. Republished in Miscellanea offerts à Charles Verlinden (Ghent, 1975), pp. 127-44. 136. Costa, Emília Viotti da. “Slave Images and Realities,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 293-310. 137. Craddock, Emmie. “The New World Frontier as a Factor in the Rise and Decline of Modern Slavery” (PhD diss., University of Texas at Austin, 1954). 138. Craton, Michael M. “The Historical Roots of the Plantation Model,” Slavery and Abolition, 5, 3 (1984), pp. 189-221. 139. Craton, Michael M. “What and Who to Whom and What: The Significance of Slave Resistance,” in Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery, pp. 259-82. 140. Craton, Michael M., ed. “Roots and Branches: Current Directions in Slave Studies,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 6, 1 (1979). (Includes “Foreword”) Republished as Roots and Branches: Current Directions in Slave Studies. New York: Pergamon Press, 1979. For contents see Anstey (with Viotti da Costa and Davis comments), Curtin, Greenfield, Hoetink, Gutman (with Engerman and Higman comments), Lovejoy (with Cooper and Kopytoff comments), Mintz (with Frucht, Karasch and Marshall comments), Rodney (with Patterson comment), and Schuler (with Brathwaite, Karasch, and Price comments). 141. Crom, L. le. “Esclavage (dans la spiritualité chrétienne),” in Abbé G. Jacquemet, ed., Catholicisme: hier, aujourd’hui, demain (Paris: Letouzey et Ané, 1947- ), vol. 4, pp. 421-24. 142. Crouch, Barry A. “‘Booty Capitalism’ and Capitalism’s Booty: Slaves and Slavery in Ancient Rome and the American South,” Slavery and Abolition, 6, 1 (1985), pp. 3-24. 22 143. Crouch, Barry A. “Women Chattels: Comparative Perspectives on the British West Indies and the American South” (Unpublished paper, International Latin American Studies Association, 1985). 144. Cunliffe, Marcus. Chattel Slavery and Wage Slavery: The Anglo-American Context, 18301860. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1979. 145. Curtin, Philip D. “The African Diaspora,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 6, 1 (1979), pp. 1-18. 146. Curtin, Philip D. “Africans At Home and Abroad,” in Daget, ed., De la traite à l’esclavage, vol. 2, pp. 695-715. 147. Curtin, Philip D. “The Black Experience of Colonialism and Imperialism,” Daedalus, 103, 2 (1974), pp. 17-30. 148. Curtin, Philip D. “Black Slavery in Perspective? (review essay: Rice, Rise and Fall of Black Slavery),” Reviews in American History, 4, 1 (1976), pp. 43-46. 149. Curtin, Philip D. “Commentary (Metropolitan Slave Codes and Slave Demography),” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 202-04. 150. 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Human Livestock: An Account of the EnglishSpeaking Peoples in the Development, Maintenance and Suppression of Slavery and the Slave Trade. London: Grayson and Grayson, 1933. 157. Davidson, Basil. “Slaves or Captives? Some Notes on Fantasy and Fact,” in Huggins, Kilson, and Fox, eds., Key Issues in the Afro-American Experience, vol. 1, pp. 54-73. 158. Davis, David Brion. “The Benefit of Slavery (review essay: Eltis, Economic Growth, and Drescher, Capitalism and Antislavery),” New York Review of Books, 35, 5 (1988), pp. 43-45. 159. Davis, David Brion. “Capitalism, Abolitionism, and Hegemony,” in Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery, pp. 209-27. 23 160. Davis, David Brion. “A Comparison of British America and Latin America,” in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 69-83. (Reprinted from The Problem of Slavery in Western Culture.) 161. 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Escravidão negra e branca: o passado através do presente. São Paulo: Global Editora, 1976. 244. Evans, William McKee. “From the Land of Canaan to the Land of Guinea: The Strange Odyssey of the ‘Sons of Ham’,” American Historical Review, 85, 1 (1980), pp. 15-43. Reprinted in The African Diaspora, pp. 80-112. 245. Evans, William McKee. “Race, Class and Myth in Slaveholding Societies” (Unpublished paper read to Southern Historical Association, Louisville, Kentucky, November 1981). 246. Everett, Susanne. The Slaves. New York: Putnam, 1978. 247. Fahrenfort, J. J. “Over onvrije en vrije arbeid,” Mens en maatschappij, 19 (1943), pp. 29-51. 248. Farias, Paulo F[ernando] de Moraes. “Models of the World and Categorical Models: The ‘Enslavable Barbarian’ as a Mobile Classificatory Label,” Slavery and Abolition, 1, 2 (1980), pp. 115-31. Reprinted in Willis, ed., Slaves and Slavery in Muslim Africa: Vol. 1, pp. 27-46. 249. Fenoaltea, Stefano. “Europe in the African Mirror: The Slave Trade and the Rise of Feudalism” (Unpublished paper, Conference on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Who Won and Who Lost?, Frederick Douglass Institute, University of Rochester, 21-23 Oct. 1988). 250. Fenoaltea, Stefano. “Slavery and Supervision in Comparative Perspective: A Model,” Journal of Economic History, 44, 3 (1984), pp. 635-68. 251. Fenoaltea, Stefano. “The Slavery Debate: A Note from the Sidelines,” Explorations in Economic History, 18, 3 (1981), pp. 304-08. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (182-86). 29 252. Ferriolo, M. Venturi. “Notizie di bibliografia ragionata (on slavery),” in Sichirollo, ed., Schiavitù antica e moderna, pp. 283-308. 253. Fiehrer, Thomas. “Tropical Civilisation and its Discontents: A Review Article (on Bush, Slave Women in Caribbean Society, and Curtin, Rise and Fall of the Plantation Complex),” Race and Class, 33, 1 (1991), pp. 93-101. 254. Findlay, Ronald. “Slavery, Incentives, and Manumission: A Theoretical Model,” Journal of Political Economy, 83, 5 (1975), pp. 923-33. 255. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Comparative Issues in Slavery. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 18 of Articles on American Slavery) 256. Finley, Moses I. “Between Slavery and Freedom,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 6, 3 (1964), pp. 233-49. Reprinted in idem, Economy and Society in Ancient Greece, pp. 116-32; also in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (183-99). Translated as “Entre l’esclavage et la liberté,” Recherches internationales à la lumière du marxisme, no. 84, 3 (1975), pp. 78-98. Also translated as “Tra schiavitù e libertà,” in Sichirollo, ed., Schiavitù antica e moderna, pp. 43-64. 257. Finley, Moses I. “The Idea of Slavery (review essay: Davis, Problem of Slavery in Western Culture),” New York Review of Books, 8, 1 (26 Jan. 1967), pp. 6-10. Reprinted in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 256-61; also in Weinstein and Gatell, eds., American Negro Slavery (2nd ed.), pp. 394-400; also in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (200-03). 258. Finley, Moses I. “A Peculiar Institution?” Times Literary Supplement, no. 3877 (2 July 1976), pp. 819-21. Translated as “Una istituzione ‘peculiare’?” in Sichirollo, ed., Schiavitù antica e moderna, pp. 21-39. 259. Finley, Moses I. “Slavery,” International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences (ed. David L. Sills) (New York: Macmillan and the Free Press, 1968), vol. 14, pp. 307-13. 260. Finley, Moses I. “Slavery and the Historians,” Histoire sociale/Social History, 12 (no. 24) (1979), pp. 247-61. 261. Fogel, Daniel. Junipero Serra, the Vatican, and Enslavement Theology. San Francisco: Ism Press, 1988. 262. Fogel, Robert W. “Cliometrics and Culture: Some Recent Developments in the Historiography of Slavery,” Journal of Social History, 11, 1 (1977), pp. 34-51. Translated as “Cliométrie et culture: quelques développements récents dans l’historiographie de l’esclavage” in Mintz, ed., Esclave = facteur de production, pp. 201-22. 263. Fogel, Robert W. “From the Marxists to the Mormons,” Times Literary Supplement, no. 3823 (13 June 1975), pp. 667-70. 30 264. Fogel, Robert W. “Past Developments and Future Prospects for Ethnic Minority Groups: Three Phases of Cliometric Research on Slavery and its Aftermath,” American Economic Review (Papers and Proceedings), 65, 2 (1975), pp. 37-46. 265. Fogel, Robert W. “A Reconsideration of the Ethical Problem of Slavery” (Paper presented to Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, San Francisco, 1983). 266. *Foli, Peter K. “Esclavage noir en Amérique et aux Antilles pendant la guerre d’indépendance américaine (1778-1783)” (Thèse, Université Paris, 1953). 267. Foner, Eric. “O significado da liberdade,” Revista brasileira de história, 8, no. 16 (1988), pp. 9-36. 268. Foner, Laura. “The Free People of Color in Louisiana and St. Domingue: A Comparative Portrait of Two Three-Caste Slave Societies,” Journal of Social History, 3, 4 (1970), pp. 406-30. Reprinted in The African Diaspora, pp. 377-96; also in Finkelman, ed., Free Blacks in a Slave Society, pp. (162-86). 269. Foner, Laura, and Eugene D. Genovese, eds. Slavery in the New World: A Reader in Comparative History. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1969. For contents see Davis (2), Elkins, Finley, Genovese (2), Goveia, Harris (2), Hoetink, Jordan, A. N. Klein, H. Klein, Mintz (2), Patterson, Sio, and Tannenbaum. 270. Fontaine, Pierre-Michel. “Research in the Political Economy of Afro-Latin America,” Latin American Research Review, 15, 2 (1980), pp. 111-41. 271. “Formes et aspects de l’esclavage,” Annales: économies, sociétés, civilisations, 22, 6 (1967), pp. 1328-38. 272. Forster, Robert. “Le système esclavagiste sur les plantations de Virginie et de Saint-Domingue au XVIIIe siècle,” Bulletin du Centre d’histoire des espaces atlantiques, 3 (1987), pp. 145-56. Translated as “Slavery in Virginia and Saint Domingue in the Late Eighteenth Century,” in Philip P. Boucher, ed., Proceedings of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Meetings of The French Colonial Historical Society (Lanham, Md.: University Press of America, 1990), pp. 1-13. 273. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. “From Slavery to Freedom - Gender, Race and Class” (Conference on “The Meaning of Freedom”, University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg, 25-26 Aug. 1988). 274. *Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. “Ghosts and Memories: The Legacy of Slavery in Women’s Imaginings” (Unpublished paper, Anna Howard Shaw Symposium, Bryn Mawr College, 16 February 1991). 275. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth, and Eugene D. Genovese. Fruits of Merchant Capital: Slavery and Bourgeois Property in the Rise and Expansion of Capitalism. New York: Oxford University Press, 1983. 276. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth, and Eugene D. Genovese. “Science and Ideology in Nineteenth-Century Economic Theory: The Political Economists of Brazil, Cuba, and the 31 Old South” (Paper presented to Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, San Francisco, 1983). 277. Franco [Ferran], José Luciano. La diaspora africana en el nuevo mundo. Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1975. (See individual essays, also listed.) 278. Franco [Ferran], José Luciano. La presencia negra en el Nuevo Mundo. Havana: Casa de las Americas, 1966. Translated as Présence africaine au Nouveau Monde (Dakar: Centre de Hautes Etudes Afro-Ibéro-Américaines de l’Université de Dakar, 1967). Also translated as A presença negra na América latina (trans. A. Portela Santos) (Lisbon: Prelo, 1971). 279. Franco [Ferran], José Luciano. ed. Esclavitud, comercio y tráfico negreros. Havana: Archivo Nacional, 1972. (Serie Archivo Nacional, no. 9) 280. Franklin, Vincent P. “Slavery, Personality, and Black Culture - Some Theoretical Issues,” Phylon, 35, 1 (1974), pp. 54-63. 281. Frazier, E. Franklin. “A Comparison of Negro-White Relations in Brazil and in the United States,” in G. Franklin Edwards, ed., E. Franklin Frazier on Race Relations (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1968), pp. 82-102. 282. Frazier, E. Franklin. Race and Culture Contacts in the Modern World. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1957. 283. Frucht, Richard, ed. Black Society in the New World. New York: Random House, 1971. For contents see Harris and Stampp. 284. Fryer, Peter. Black People in the British Empire: An Introduction. London: Pluto, 1988. 285. Fyfe, Christopher. “Race as a Control over Slaves and Subject Peoples” (Unpublished paper, World Conference on Slavery and Society in History, Ahmadu Bello University, Kaduna, Nigeria, 26-30 March 1990). 286. Gaillard, Gerald. “Meillassoux’s ‘Anthropologie de esclavage, le ventre de fer et d’argent’ (review essay),” Dialectical Anthropology, 14, 3 (1989), pp. 235-38. 287. Galenson, David W. Traders, Planters and Slaves: Market Behavior in Early English America. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986. 288. Geggus, David P. “British Opinion and the Emergence of Haiti, 1791-1805,” in Walvin, ed., Slavery and British Society, pp. 123-49. 289. Geggus, David P. “The Causation of Slave Rebellions: An Overview,” Indian Historical Review, 15, 1-2 (1988-89), pp. 116-29. 290. Geggus, David P. “The French and Haitian Revolutions, and Resistance to Slavery in the Americas: An Overview,” Revue française d’histoire d’outre-mer, 76, 1 (nos. 282-83) (1989), pp. 107-24. 32 291. Geggus, David P. “The French Revolution, Racial Equality, and Slavery” (Paper presented to International Congress on the History of the French Revolution, Washington, D.C., 2-6 May 1989). 292. Geggus, David P. “The Revolutionary Period and Slave Resistance in the Americas” (Paper presented to Bicentennial Conference on the French Revolution, East Carolina University, 6-9 November 1989). 293. Gemery, Henry A., and Jan S. Hogendorn. “Technological Change, Slavery, and the Slave Trade,” in Clive Dewey and A. G. Hopkins, eds., The Imperial Impact: Studies in the Economic History of Africa and India (London: Athlone Press, 1978), pp. 243-58. 294. Genovese, Eugene D. “Concluding Remarks (on Race and Slavery in the Western Hemisphere),” in Engerman and Genovese, eds., Race and Slavery, pp. 531-39. 295. Genovese, Eugene D. From Rebellion to Revolution. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1979. 296. Genovese, Eugene D. “Herbert Aptheker’s Achievement and Our Responsibility,” in Okihiro, ed., In Resistance, pp. 21-31. 297. Genovese, Eugene D. “Materialism and Idealism in the History of Negro Slavery in the Americas,” Journal of Social History, 1, 4 (1968), pp. 371-94. Reprinted in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 238-55; also in Genovese, In Red and Black, pp. 23-52; also in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (371-94). Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-102. 298. Genovese, Eugene D. “Rebelliousness and Docility in the Negro Slave: A Critique of the Elkins Thesis,” Civil War History, 13, 4 (1967), pp. 293-314. Reprinted in Lane, ed., Debate Over Slavery, pp. 43-74; also in Haynes, ed., Blacks in White America, pp. 214-35; also in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp.(157-78). Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-103. 299. Genovese, Eugene D. “Slavery - The World’s Burden,” in Owens, ed., Perspectives and Irony, pp. 27-50. Revised in Fox-Genovese and Genovese, Fruits of Merchant Capital, pp. 391-414. 300. Genovese, Eugene D. “The Treatment of Slaves in Different Countries: Problem in the Applications of the Comparative Method,” in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 202-10. Reprinted in Genovese, In Red and Black, pp. 158-72. Translated as “Le traitement des esclaves dans différents pays: problèmes d’application de la méthode comparative,” in Mintz, ed., Esclave = facteur de production, pp. 172-83. 301. Genovese, Eugene D. The World the Slaveholders Made: Two Essays in Interpretation. New York: Pantheon, 1969. Revised edition, with new introduction. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1988. 33 302. Genovese, Eugene D., ed. The Slave Economies. Volume 1: Historical and Theoretical Perspectives. Volume 2: Slavery in the International Economy. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1973. For contents see Arnold, Conrad and Meyer, Curtin, Davidson, Finley, Furtado, Genovese, Ianni, James, Knight, Lombardi, Mandle, Mintz, Polanyi, Williams, and Woodman. 303. Genovese, Eugene D., and Elizabeth Fox-Genovese. “The Slave Economies in Political Perspective,” Journal of American History, 66, 1 (1979), pp. 7-23. Revised in Fox-Genovese and Genovese, Fruits of Merchant Capital, pp. 34-60. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (205-21). 304. Gerbeau, Hubert. Les esclaves noirs: pour une histoire du silence. Paris: A. Balland, 1970. 305. Gerbeau, Hubert. “Un mort-vivant: l’esclavage,” Présence africaine, 61 (1967), pp. 180-98. 306. Gerber, David. “The Origins of Black Politics (review essay: Genovese, From Rebellion to Revolution),” Radical America, 15, 6 (1981), pp. 47-56. 307. Gershman, Sally. “Alexis de Tocqueville and Slavery,” French Historical Studies, 9, 3 (1976), pp. 467-83. 308. Ghersi, Emanuele. La schiavitù e l’evoluzione della politica coloniale. Padua: CEDAM, Casa editrice dott. A. Milani, 1935. 309. *Gijswijt, M. Slavenhandel en slavernij als sociaal en politiek probleem: de abolities door Engeland, Frankrijk en Nederland. Amsterdam: Historisch Seminarium van de Universiteit van Amsterdam, 1975. 310. Gilbertson, Albert N. “Slavery (Primitive),” in James Hastings, ed., Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics (New York: Scribners, 1921), vol. 11, pp. 595-602. 311. González, Doria. “El mercado mundial azucarero y su incidencia en la crisis definitiva esclavista,” in (Rodríguez, ed.) Temas acerca de la esclavitud, pp. 145-66. 312. Goodspeed, Edgar J. “Paul and Slavery,” Journal of Bible and Religion, 11, 3 (1943), pp. 169-70. 313. Goody, Jack. “Slavery in Time and Space,” in Watson, ed., Asian and African Systems of Slavery, pp. 16-43. 314. Gordon, Ezikiel N. “Slavery: Introduction,” and sections on modern slavery, Encyclopaedia Britannica (Chicago: William Benton, 1971), vol. 20, pp. 629-30, 633-44. 315. Gorender, Jacob. “Questionamentos sobre a teoria ec onômica do escravismo colonial,” Estudos econômicos, 13, 1 (1983), pp. 7-40. 316. Goveia, Elsa V. “Comment on ‘Anglicanism, Catholicism, and the Negro Slave’,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 8, 3 (1966), pp. 328-30. 317. Grabowski, R., and C. Pasurka. “The Relative Efficiency of Slave Agriculture: An Application of a Stochastic Production Frontier,” Applied Economics, 21, 5 (1989), pp. 58796. 34 318. Graham, Richard. “Slavery and Economic Development: Brazil and the United States South in the Nineteenth Century,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 23, 4 (l981), pp. 620-55. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (248-83). Translated as “Escravidão e desenvolvimento econômico: Brasil e Sul dos Estados Unidos no século XIX,” Estudos econômicos, 13, 1 (1983), pp. 223-58. 319. Gratus, Jack. The Great White Lie. New York and London: Monthly Review Press, 1973. 320. Gray, Louis H. “Eunuch,” Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1908-27), vol. 5, pp. 579-84. 321. Green, William A. “Discovery and Exploitation of the New World in Macrohistorical Perspective,” in Daget, ed., De la traite à l’esclavage, vol. 1, pp. 73-88. 322. Green, William A. “The Perils of Comparative History: Belize and the British Sugar Colonies after Slavery,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 26, 1 (1984), pp. 11219. 323. Green, William A. “Race and Slavery: Considerations on the Williams Thesis,” in Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery, pp. 25-49. 324. Greenberg, Michael. “Slavery and the Protestant Ethic,” Louisiana Studies, 15, 3 (1976), pp. 209-39. 325. Greenfield, Sidney M. “Madeira and the Beginning of New World Sugar Cane Cultivation and Plantation Slavery: A Study in Institution Building,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds. Comparative Perspectives, pp. 536-52. 326. Greenfield, Sidney M. “Plantations, Sugar Cane and Slavery,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 6, 1 (1979), pp. 85-120. 327. Greenfield, Sidney M. “Slavery and the Plantation in the New World: The Development and Diffusion of a Social Form,” Journal of Inter-American Studies, 11, 1 (1969), pp. 44-57. 328. Greenidge, Charles W. W. Slavery. London: Allen and Unwin, 1958. 329. Greenidge, Charles W. W. “Slavery After World War I,” Encyclopaedia Britannica (Chicago: William Benton, 1959), vol. 20, pp. 786-87. 330. Grim, Clarence E. “On Slavery, Salt and the Great Prevalence of Hypertension in Black Americans,” Clinical Research, 36, 3 (1988), p. 426A. (Abstract submitted to the 45th Annual Meeting of the American Federation for Clinical Research) 331. Grim, Clarence E., and Thomas W. Wilson. “Salt, Slavery, Survival and the Greater Prevalence of Hypertension in Western Hemisphere Blacks: A Theory of Unnatural Selection” (Unpublished paper, Conference on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Who Won and Who Lost?, Frederick Douglass Institute, University of Rochester, 21-23 Oct. 1988). 35 332. Groot, Sylvia W. de. “Slaven en marrons: reacties op het plantagesysteem in de nieuwe wereld: een schema,” OSO (Tijdschrift voor Surinaamse Taalkunde, Letterkunde en Geschiedenis), 2, 2 (1983), pp. 173-82. 333. Günther, Rigobert. “Herausbildung und Systemcharakter der vorkapitalistischen Gesellschaftsformationen,” Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft, 17, 1-2 (1969), pp. 194-208. 334. Guterman, S. S. “Alternative Theories in the Study of Slavery, the Concentration Camp, and Personality,” British Journal of Sociology, 26, 2 (1975), pp. 186-202. 335. Gutiérrez, Horácio, and John M. Monteiro, comps. A escravidão na América latina e no Caribe. São Paulo: CELA (Universidade Estadual Paulista), 1990. (Série Bibliografias Básicas, no. 2) 336. *Gutzmore, Cecil. “The Continuing Dispute over the Connections between the Capitalist Mode of Production and Chattel Slavery” (Unpublished paper, Sesquicentennial of the Death of William Wilberforce and the Emancipation Act of 1833). 337. Hafner, Annemarie. Sklave, Kuli, Lohnarbeiter: Formierung und Kampf der Arbeiterklasse in Kolonien und national befreiten Ländern: ein historischer Abriss. Berlin: Dietz, 1988. 338. Haiser, Franz. Die Sklaverei, ihre biologische Begründung und sittliche Rechtfertigung. Munich: J. F. Lehmann, 1923. 339. Halcrow, Elizabeth M. Canes and Chains: A Study of Sugar and Slavery. Kingston and London: Heinemann, 1982. 340. Hall, Gwendolyn Midlo. “Commentary (Social Institutions and Slave Societies),” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 281-83. 341. Hall, Gwendolyn Midlo. “Negro Slaves in the Americas,” Freedomways, 4, 31 (1964), pp. 319-30. 342. Hall, Gwendolyn Midlo. Social Control in Slave Plantation Societies: A Comparison of St. Domingue and Cuba. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1972. 343. Hallewell, Laurence. “Charting the Middle Passage: Recent Reference Books on the African Diaspora,” Latin American Research Review, 19, 3 (1984), pp. 217-22. 344. Hancock, Ian F. “Gullah and Barbadian - Origins and Relationships,” American Speech, 55, 1 (1980), pp. 17-35. 345. Hansen, Klaus J. “Review Article: Slaves and Historians,” Queens Quarterly, 85, 1 (1978), pp. 109-13. 346. Harrington, J. Drew. “Classical Antiquity and the Proslavery Argument,” Slavery and Abolition, 10, 1 (1989), pp. 60-72. 347. Harris, John Hobbis. “Slavery: A World Review,” Contemporary Review, 150 (no. 848) (1936), pp. 164-71. Reprinted London: The Anti-Slavery and Aborigines’ Protection Society, 1936. 348. Harris, John Hobbis. Slavery or “Sacred Trust”? London: Williams and Norgate, 1926. Reprinted New York: Negro Universities Press, 1969. 36 349. Harris, Marvin. “The Myth of the Friendly Master,” in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the Americas, pp. 38-47. (Reprinted from Patterns of Race in the Americas.) 350. Harris, Marvin. “The Origin of the Descent Rule,” in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 48-59. (Reprinted from Patterns of Race in the Americas.) Also adapted in Brown, ed., Slavery in American Society, pp. 65-71. 351. Harris, Marvin. Patterns of Race in the Americas. New York: Walker, 1964. Selection (pp. 65-78) reprinted in Lane, ed., Debate Over Slavery, pp. 191-209. 352. Hart, Keith. “Blacks in the World Economy,” Cambridge Anthropology, 14, 2 (1990), pp. 43-56. 353. Hartfield, Marianne. “New Thoughts on the Proslavery Natural Law Theory: The Importance of History and the Study of Ancient Slavery,” Southern Studies, 22, 3 (1983), pp. 244-59. 354. Hayward, Jack E. S., ed. Out of Slavery: Abolition and After. London: Frank Cass, 1985. For contents see Craton and Patterson. 355. Heffernan, Esther. “Punishment for Crime: Involuntary Servitude or Slavery?” (Unpublished paper, American Sociological Association, Washington, D.C., 1985) 356. Heffernan, Esther. “Theological Reflection, Prisons and Slavery” (Unpublished paper, Convention of Jail and Prison Ministers, Detroit, 1986). 357. Heinen, Heinz. “Sklaverei,” in Sowjetsystem und demokratische Gesellschaft: eine vergleichende Enzyklopädie (Freiburg: Herder, 1972), vol. 5, cols. 877-87. Translated as “Slavery,” in Marxism, Communism and Western Society: A Comparative Encyclopedia, vol. 7 (1973), pp. 336-41. 358. Hellie, Richard. “Muscovite Slavery in Comparative Perspective,” Russian History/Histoire russe, 6, 2 (1979), pp. 133-209. 359. Hellie, Richard. “Slavery,” Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th edition (Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1974), vol. 27, pp. 285-98. 360. Hemmerdinger, Bertrand. “L’esclavagisme antique vu par le thermidorien Volney,” Quaderni di storia, 1 (1975), pp. 115-16. 361. Henige, David P. “When Did Smallpox Reach the New World (and Why Does it Matter?),” in Lovejoy, ed., Africans in Bondage, pp. 11-26. 362. Herskovits, Melville J. “The Ahistorical Approach to Afroamerican Studies: A Critique,” American Anthropologist, 62, 4 (1960), pp. 559-68. 363. Herskovits, Melville J. The Myth of the Negro Past. New York: Harper, 1941. New edition. Introduction by Sidney W. Mintz. Boston: Beacon Press, 1990. 364. Herskovits, Melville J. “On the Provenience of New World Negroes,” Social Forces, 12, 2 (1933), pp. 247-62. Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-132. 37 365. Herskovits, Melville J., ed. The New World Negro: Selected Papers in Afroamerican Studies. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1966. 366. Heuman, Gad. “America and the Americas: The Response of the Slaves,” History Today, 34, 4 (1984), pp. 31-35. 367. Heuman, Gad. “Introduction (to Heuman, ed., Out of the House of Bondage),” Slavery and Abolition, 6, 3 (1985), pp. 1-8. 368. Heuman, Gad, ed. Out of the House of Bondage: Runaways, Resistance and Marronage in Africa and the New World. London: Frank Cass, 1985. (Special issue, Slavery and Abolition, 6, 3) For contents see Beckles, Clarence-Smith, Geggus, Groot, Heuman (2), Kay and Cary, McFarlane, Morgan, Rathbone, and Sheridan. 369. Heywood, Linda M. “Black Slavery in the Late Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century in the Americas,” in Howard University, Black Diaspora Committee, The Black Diaspora, pp. 123-30. 370. Higman, Barry W. “The Archaeology of Slavery (review essay: Otto, Cannon’s Point Plantation, and Singleton, ed., Archaeology of Slavery and Plantation Life),” Slavery and Abolition, 9, 1 (1988), pp. 85-92. 371. Higman, Barry W. “Methodological Problems in the Study of the Slave Family,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 591-96 372. Higman, Barry W. “Slavery and the Development of Demographic Theory in the Age of the Industrial Revolution,” in Walvin, ed., Slavery and British Society, pp. 164-94. 373. Hine, Darlene Clark, and D. Barry Gaspar, eds. Black Women and Slavery. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, forthcoming. 374. Hine, William L. “American Slavery and Russian Serfdom: A Preliminary Comparison,” Phylon, 36 (1975), pp. 378-84. 375. Hodson, John D. “Mill, Paternalism, and Slavery,” Analysis, 41, 1 (1981), pp. 6062. 376. Hoetink, Harry. “A Critique of the Tannenbaum Thesis,” in Delson, ed., Readings in Caribbean History and Economics, pp. 70-76. (Reprinted from Slavery and Race Relations in the Americas, pp. 3-9.) 377. Hoetink, Harry. “The Cultural Links,” in Margaret E. Crahan and Franklin W. Knight, eds., Africa and the Caribbean: The Legacies of a Link (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979), pp. 20-40. 378. Hoetink, Harry. “Diferencias en relaciones raciales entre Curazao y Surinam,” Revista de ciencias sociales, 5, 4 (1961), pp. 499-514. Translated as “Race Relations in Curação and Surinam,” in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 178-88. 379. Hoetink, Harry. De gespleten samenleving in het Caribisch gebied: Bijdrage tot de sociologie der rasrelaties in gesegmenteerde maatschappijen. Assen: Van Gorcum, 1961. 38 Translated as The Two Variants in Caribbean Race Relations: A Contribution to the Sociology of Segmented Societies (trans. Eva M. Hooykaas) (London: Oxford University Press, 1967). 380. Hoetink, Harry. “Slavery and Race,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 6, 1 (1979), pp. 255-68. Commentary by Arnold Sio (pp. 269-74). 381. Hoetink, Harry. Slavery and Race Relations in the Americas: Comparative Notes on their Nature and Nexus. New York: Harper and Row, 1973. 382. Hogg, Peter C. Slavery: The Afro-American Experience. London: British Library Reference Division, 1979. 383. Holt, Thomas C. “Of Human Progress and Intellectual Apostasy (review essay: Davis, Slavery and Human Progress),” Reviews in American History, 15, 1 (1987), pp. 50-58. 384. Hope, Colin. “Dr. Eric Williams: His Work and Life: An Overview,” Bulletin of Eastern Caribbean Affairs, 10, 4 (1984), pp. 1-7. 385. Horowitz, Donald L. “Color Differentiation in the American Systems of Slavery,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 3, 3 (1973), pp. 509-41. 386. Houtte, J. A. van. “De opheffing van slavenhandel en slavernij: een wending in de koloniale economie van de XIXe euw,” Economisch en sociaal tijdschrift, 3 (1949), pp. 129-49. 387. Howard University. Black Diaspora Committee. The African Diaspora: Africans and their Descendants in the Wider World to 1800. See listing under title. 388. Howard University. Black Diaspora Committee. The Black Diaspora: Africans and their Descendants in the Wider World 1800 to the Present. See listing under title. 389. Hunting, Claudine. “The Philosophes and Black Slavery: 1748-1765,” Journal of the History of Ideas, 39, 3 (1978), pp. 405-18. 390. Ingram, John Kells. “Slavery,” Encyclopaedia Britannica (11th edition) (Cambridge: At the University Press, 1911), vol. 25, pp. 216-26. 391. Inikori, Joseph E. “Slavery and the Revolution in Cotton Textile Production in England,” Social Science History, 13, 4 (1989), pp. 343-79. Reprinted in idem and Engerman, eds., Atlantic Slave Trade, pp. 145-81. 392. Irwin, Graham W., ed. Africans Abroad: A Documentary History of the Black Diaspora in Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean during the Age of Slavery. New York: Columbia University Press, 1977. 393. Isaac, Ephraim. “Genesis, Judaism, and the ‘Sons of Ham’,” Slavery and Abolition, 1, 1 (1980), pp. 3-17. Reprinted in Willis, ed., Slaves and Slavery in Muslim Africa: Vol. 1, pp. 75-91. 394. Jackson, Bernard S. “Biblical Laws of Slavery: A Comparative Approach,” in Archer, ed., Slavery and Other Forms of Unfree Labour, pp. 88-101. 39 395. James, C. L. R. “The Atlantic Slave Trade and Slavery: Some Interpretations of their Significance in the Development of the United States and the Western World,” in Amistad (New York: Random House, 1970), vol. 1, pp. 119-64. 396. Johnson, Harry G. “Negro Slavery,” Encounter, 44, 1 (1975), pp. 56-59. 397. Johnston, Harry H. The Negro in the New World. New York: Macmillan, 1910. 398. Jolly, J. “Slavery (Hindu),” in James Hastings, ed., Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics (New York: Scribners, 1921), vol. 11, pp. 618-19. 399. Jones, Archer, and Robert J. Carlsson. “Slavery and Slaving,” American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 30, 2 (1971), pp. 171-77. 400. Jones, Rhett S. “Black and Native American Relations Before 1800,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 1, 3 (1977), pp. 151-63. 401. Jones, Rhett S. “Identity, Self-Concept, and Shifting Political Allegiances of Blacks in the Colonial Americas: Maroons against Black Shot,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 5, 1 (1981), pp. 61-84. 402. Jones, Rhett S. “Slavery in the Colonial Americas,” Black World, 24, 4 (1975), pp. 28-39. 403. Jong, C. de. “Een vergelijking van de slavenwetten in Spaans, Brits, Frans, Deens en Nederlands West-Indië,” in Uit Suriname’s historie (Amsterdam: Surinaamse Historische Kring, 1963), pp. 16-19. 404. Jordan, Winthrop D. “American Chiaroscuro: The Status and Definition of Mulattoes in the British Colonies,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 19, 2 (1962), pp. 183-200. Reprinted in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 189-201; also in Hoffer, ed., Africans Become Afro-Americans, pp. 74-91; also in Finkelman, ed., Colonial Southern Slavery, pp. (93-110). Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-158. 405. Jordan, Winthrop D. “Planter and Slave Identity Formation: Some Problems in the Comparative Approach,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 35-40. 406. Journal of Social History, 3, 4 (1970). Special issue on slavery. For contents see Foner, Graham, Kent, Schuler, and Schwartz. 407. Karras, Alan L. “Of Human Bondage: Creating an Atlantic History of Slavery (review essay: Silver, New Face on the Countryside, Lewis, Race and Slavery in the Middle East, Watson, Slave Law in the Americas, Tomich, Slavery in the Circuit of Sugar),” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 22, 2 (1991), pp. 285-93. 408. Kautsky, Karl. “Sklaverei und Kapitalismus,” Die Neue Zeit, 29, Bd. 2, Nr. 47 (1910-11), pp. 713-25. 409. Kaye, Jacqueline. “Literary Images of Slavery and Resistance: The Case of Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Cecilia Valdés,” Slavery and Abolition, 5, 2 (1984), pp. 105-17. 410. *Keller, Saskia. “Der slavenplantage: een totale institutie?” Antropologische verkenningen, 1 (1982), pp. 1-45. 40 411. Kilian, Martin A., and E. Lynn Tatom. “Marx, Hegel, and the Marxian of the Master Class: Eugene D. Genovese on Slavery,” Journal of Negro History, 66, 3 (1981), pp. 189-208. 412. Kilson, Martin L., and Robert I. Rotberg, eds. The African Diaspora: Interpretive Essays. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1976. For contents see Edwards and Walvin, Fyfe, Higgins, Lewis, Miller, Rout, Snowden, Jr., and Walker. 413. Kim, Hyong-In. “Rural Slavery in Antebellum South Carolina and Early Choson Korea” (PhD diss., University of New Mexico, 1990). 414. Kiple, Kenneth F. “La dimensión epidemiológica de la esclavitud de las Antillas, Florida, y Luisiana” (Paper read to the Second Conference of the Florida-Spanish Alliance, 1981). 415. Kiple, Kenneth F. “Future Studies of the Biological Past of the Black,” Social Science History, 10, 4 (1986), pp. 501-06. Reprinted in idem, ed., The African Exchange, pp. 269-74. 416. Kiple, Kenneth F. “Historical Dimensions of Disease in the Plantation Economies” (Paper read to Seminar on Health, Welfare, and Development in Latin America and the Caribbean, Ontario Cooperative Program in Latin Caribbean Studies, l980). 417. Kiple, Kenneth F. “Introduction (to ‘The Biological Past of the Black’),” Social Science History, 10, 4 (1986), pp. 339-42. 418. Kiple, Kenneth F. “A Survey of Recent Literature on the Biological Past of the Black,” Social Science History, 10, 4 (1986), pp. 343-68. Reprinted in idem, ed., The African Exchange, pp. 7-34. 419. Kiple, Kenneth F. “Twentieth Century Views of Slavery in the Americas,” in Lysle E. Meyer, ed., Historical Papers: Selected Proceedings of the Sixth Northern Great Plains History Conference (Moorehead, Minn.: 1972), pp. 175-202. 420. Kiple, Kenneth F., ed. The African Exchange: Toward a Biological History of the Black People. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1988. For contents see Alden and Miller, Cooper, Curtin, Dirks, Handler, et al., Kiple (2), Steckel, and Wilson. 421. Kiple, Kenneth F., and Virginia Himmelsteib King. Another Dimension to the Black Diaspora. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1981. 422. Kiple, Kenneth F., and Virginia Kiple. “The African Connection: Slavery, Disease, and Racism,” Phylon, 41, 3 (1980), pp. 211-22. 423. Klein, Herbert S. African Slavery in Latin America and the Caribbean. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986. Translated as A escravidão africana: América Latina e Caribe (São Paulo: Editora Brasiliense, 1987). 41 424. Klein, Herbert S. “The American Demand for Slaves and the Afro-American Patterns of Settlement,” in The African Diaspora, pp. 138-51. (Reprinted (from Middle Passage.) 425. Klein, Herbert S. “Anglicanism, Catholicism, and the Negro Slave,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 8, 3 (1966), pp. 295-327. Reprinted in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 138-67 (with comment by Elsa V. Goveia, pp. 167-69); also in Lane, ed., Debate Over Slavery, pp. 13790; also in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (285-17). Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-170. 426. Klein, Herbert S. “Un continente di schiavi,” in Carlo Pirovano, ed., Europa moderna: la disgregazione dell’Ancien Régime (Milan: Banco Nazionale del Lavoro, 1987), pp. 521-27. 427. Klein, Herbert S. “Patterns of Settlement of the Afro-American Population in the New World,” in Huggins, Kilson, and Fox, eds., Key Issues in the Afro-American Experience, vol. 1, pp. 99-115. 428. Klein, Herbert S. Slavery in the Americas: A Comparative Study of Virginia and Cuba. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1967. 429. Klein, Herbert S. “Sociedades esclavistas en las Américas - un estudio comparativo,” Desarrollo económico (Buenos Aires: Instituto de Desarrollo Económico), 6, 22-23 (1966), pp. 227-45. 430. Klein, Herbert S., and Stanley L. Engerman. “A demografia dos escravos americanos,” in Maria Luiza Marcílio, org., População e sociedade: evolução das sociedades préindustriais (Petrópolis: Vozes, 1984), pp. 208-27. 431. Klein, Herbert S., and Stanley L. Engerman. “Fertility Differentials between Slaves in the United States and the British West Indies: A Note on Lactation Practices and their Possible Implications,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 35, 2 (1978), pp. 357-74. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (319-36). 432. Klein, Herbert S., and Stanley L. Engerman. “The Transition from Slave to Free Labor: Notes on a Comparative Economic Model,” in Moreno Fraginals, Moya Pons, and Engerman, eds., Between Slavery and Free Labor, pp. 255-69. Translated as “Del trabajo esclavo al trabajo libre: notas en torno a un modelo económico comparativo,” HISLA (Revista latinoamericana de história económica y social), 1, 1 (1983), pp. 41-55. 433. Klein, Martin A. “Introduction: Modern European Expansion and Traditional Servitude in Africa and Asia,” in idem, ed., Breaking the Chains, pp. 1-36. 434. Klein, Martin A., ed. Breaking the Chains: Slavery, Bondage and Emancipation in Africa and Asia (forthcoming). For contents see Clarence-Smith, Feeny, Klein (2), Kumar, Mbodj, Mundle, Prakash, and Toledano. 42 435. Kloosterboer, Willemina. Onvrije arbeid na de afschaffing van de slavernij. s’Gravenhage: Excelsior, 1954. Translated as Involuntary Labour Since the Abolition of Slavery: A Survey of Compulsory Labour Throughout the World (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1960). Reprinted Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1976. 436. Knight, Franklin W. “The Caribbean Sugar Industry and Slavery (review essay: Hagelberg, Caribbean Sugar Industries, Kiple, Blacks in Colonial Cuba, and Moreno Fraginals, El ingenio),” Latin American Research Review, 18, 2 (1983), pp. 219-29. 437. Knight, Franklin W. “Slavery and Lagging Capitalism in the Spanish and Portuguese American Empires, 1492-1713,” in Solow, ed., Slavery and the Rise of the Atlantic System, pp. 62-74. 438. Knight, Franklin W., and Margaret E. Crahan. “The African Migration and the Origins of an Afro-American Society and Culture,” in Margaret E. Crahan and Franklin W. Knight, eds., Africa and the Caribbean: The Legacies of a Link (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979), pp. 1-19. 439. Köbben, A. J. F. “Suriname en Noord-Brazilie in de slaventijd: een vergelijking,” in Benno Francisco Galjart, et al., Een andere in een ander: liber amicorum voor R. A. J. van Lier (Assen: Van Gorcum, 1982), pp. 47-56. 440. Kolchin, Peter. “Comparing American History (review essay: including Tannenbaum, Slave and Citizen, and Elkins, Slavery),” Reviews in American History, 10, 4 (1982), pp. 64-81. 441. *Kolchin, Peter. “In Defense of Servitude: A Comparison of American Pro-Slave and Russian Proserfdom Arguments, 1750-1860” (Paper presented to American Historical Association, San Francisco, 1978). 442. Kolchin, Peter. “The Process of Confrontation: Patterns of Resistance to Bondage in Nineteenth-Century Russia and the United States,” Journal of Social History, 11, 4 (1978), pp. 457-90. 443. Kolchin, Peter. “Some Recent Works on Slavery Outside the United States: An American Perspective. A Review Article [of miscellaneous works],” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 28, 4 (1986), pp. 767-77. 444. Kolchin, Peter. “Some Thoughts on Emancipation in Comparative Perspective: Russia and the United States South,” Slavery and Abolition, 11, 3 (1990), pp. 351-67. 445. Kolchin, Peter. Unfree Labor: American Slavery and Russian Serfdom. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap/Harvard University Press, 1987. 446. Kopytoff, Igor. “Slavery,” Annual Review of Anthropology, 11 (1982), pp. 207-30. 447. Korostovstev, Michail A. “Was ist ein Sklave?” Altorientalische Forschungen, 5 (1977), pp. 5-16. 448. Koval, B. I. “Colonial Plantation Slavery and Primary Capital Accumulation in Western Europe,” in Russell H. Bartley, ed. and trans., Soviet Historians on Latin America: Recent Scholarly Contributions (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1978), pp. 89-108. 43 449. Krieger, Leonard. “Reassessing Slavery,” Partisan Review, 46, 1 (1979), pp. 152-58. 450. Krosigk, Friedrich v. “Slavery and Capitalism” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 451. Kubik, Gerhard. “Transplantation of African Music Cultures into the New World” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 452. Kuitenbrower, Maarten. “De nederlandse afschaffing van de slavernij in vergelijkend perspectief,” Bijdragen en Mededelingen betreffende de Geschiedenis der Nederlanden, 93, 1 (1978), pp. 69-100. 453. Landtman, Gunnar. The Origin of the Inequality of the Social Classes. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1938. 454. Lane, Ann J., ed. The Debate Over Slavery: Stanley Elkins and his Critics. Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 1971. For contents see Bryce-Laporte, Davis, Frederickson and Lasch, Genovese (2), Harris, H. Klein, Kraditor, Lewis, Patterson, Pinderhughes, Stuckey, and Thorpe. 455. Lange, Frederick W., and Jerome S. Handler. “The Ethnohistorical Approach to Slavery,” in Singleton, ed., Archaeology of Slavery, pp. 15-32. 456. Lara, Oruno D. “De l’Atlantique à l’aire Caraïbe: nègres cimarrons et révoltes d’esclaves” (Paris, 1971, 4 vols, typed). 457. Lara, Oruno D. “Negro Resistance to Slavery and the Atlantic Slave Trade from Africa to Black America,” in UNESCO, African Slave Trade, pp. 101-18. 458. Lara, Oruno D. “Resistance to Slavery: From Africa to Black America,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 464-80. 459. Lara, Oruno D. “Témoignages afro-américains sur l’esclavage,” Présence africaine, 109 (1979), pp. 144-51. 460. Lawler, Peter Augustine. “Tocqueville on Slavery, Ancient and Modern,” South Atlantic Quarterly, 80, 4 (1981), pp. 466-77. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (338-49). 461. Leach, Edmund. “Caste, Class and Slavery: The Taxonomic Problem,” in Reuck and Knight, eds., Caste and Race, pp. 5-16. (With discussion, pp. 17-27) 462. League of Nations. Esclavage. Geneva: League of Nations, 1930. 463. League of Nations 1925-1936. Evidence and Reports of the Temporary Slavery Commission, 1924-1925; The Committee of Experts on Slavery, 1931-1932; The Advisory Committee of Experts on Slavery, 1934-1936. 464. Lengellé, Maurice. L’esclavage. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1955. 465. Leone, Mark P., and Parker B. Potter, Jr. “Nineteenth-Century Plantation Slavery and its Aftermaths,” in idem, eds., The Recovery of Meaning: Historical Archaeology in the Eastern United States (Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1988), pp. 327-31. 44 466. Lerner, Gerda. “Women and Slavery,” Slavery and Abolition, 4, 3 (1983), pp. 173-98. 467. Levine, Robert M. Race and Ethnic Relations in Latin America and the Caribbean (An Historical Dictionary and Bibliography). Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1980. 468. Lewis, Gordon K. Slavery: Imperialism and Freedom: Studies in English Radical Thought. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1978. 469. Lewis, Mary Agnes. “Slavery and Personality: A Further Comment,” American Quarterly, 19, 1 (1967), pp. 114-21. Reprinted in Lane, ed., Debate Over Slavery, pp. 75-86. 470. Liedel, Donald E. “Slavery and Abolition: Stanley Elkins and His Critics (review essay),” Journal of Popular Culture, 5, 3 (1971), pp. 616-19. 471. Linebaugh, Peter, and Marcus Redicker. “The Many-Headed Hydra: Sailors, Slaves, and the Atlantic Working Class in the Eighteenth Century,” Journal of Historical Sociology, 3, 3 (1990), pp. 225-52. 472. Littlefield, Daniel C. “Continuity and Change in Slave Culture: South Carolina and the West Indies,” Southern Studies, 26, 3 (1987), pp. 202-16. 473. Littlefield, Daniel C. “Plantations, Paternalism, and Profitability: Factors Affecting African Demography in the Old British Empire,” Journal of Southern History, 47, 2 (1981), pp. 167-82. 474. Llavador Mira, José. “Modificación y límites de la esclavitud,” in Atti del XL Congresso Internazionale degli Americanisti (Roma-Genova, 1972) (Genoa: Tilgher, 1975), vol. 3, pp. 445-51. 475. Lockwood, Daniel Ralph. “The Significance of the Slavery Motif in the Gospels” (ThD thesis, Dallas Theological Seminary, 1982). 476. Lombardi, John V. “Comparative Slave Systems in the Americas: A Critical Review,” in Richard Graham and Peter H. Smith, eds., New Approaches to Latin American History (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1974), pp. 156-74. 477. Losada, Juan, and Jorge Mayor. “Esclavitud y psicología: una investigación interdisciplinaria,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 22, 3 (1980), pp. 133-44. 478. Lovejoy, Paul E. “Introduction,” in idem, ed., Africans in Bondage, pp. 1-10. 479. Lovejoy, Paul E. “Miller’s Vision of Meillassoux,” International Journal of African Historical Studies, 24, 1 (1991), pp. 133-45. 480. Lovejoy, Paul E., ed. Africans in Bondage: Studies in Slavery and the Slave Trade (Essays in Honor of Philip D. Curtin). Madison: African Studies Program, University of Wisconsin Madison, University of Wisconsin Press, 1986. For contents see Alagoa, Bucher, Cordell, Echenberg, Henige, Isaacman, Karasch, Lovejoy (2), Manning, Miller, Palmer, Schick, and Schuler. 481. Lumenga-Neso, Kiobe. “La révolution américaine et la question de l’esclavage au 18e siècle,” Zaïre-Afrique, 16 (1976), pp. 327-36. 45 482. Luraghi, Raimondo. “Wage Labor in the ‘Rice Belt’ of Northern Italy and Slave Labor in the American South - A First Approach,” Southern Studies, 16, 2 (1977), pp. 109-27. 483. McDonald, Roderick A[lexander]. “‘Goods and Chattels’: The Economy of Slaves on Sugar Plantations in Jamaica and Louisiana” (PhD diss., University of Kansas, 1981). 484. McGlynn, Frank, ed. “Perspectives on Manumission,” Slavery and Abolition (special issue), 10, 3 (1989). For contents see Brana-Shute, Chalhoub, Donald, Drescher, Hellie, and Miers. 485. MacInnes, Charles M. England and Slavery. Bristol: Arrowsmith, 1934. 486. McKitrick, Eric, and Stanley M. Elkins. “Institutions and the Law of Slavery: The Dynamics of Unopposed Capitalism,” American Quarterly, 9, 1 (1957), pp. 3-21; 9, 2 (1957), pp. 159-79. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (141-81); Hoffer, ed., Africans Become Afro-Americans, pp. 25-45. Part 2 reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 111-31; also in Elkins, Slavery (2nd ed.), pp. 52-80. 487. MacLeod, William C[hristie]. “Some Aspects of Primitive Chattel Slavery,” Social Forces, 4, 1 (1925-26), pp. 137-41. 488. MacMunn, George. Slavery Through the Ages. London: Nicholson and Watson, 1938. 489. *Mactoux, M. M. “Pour une approche nouvelle du champ lexical de l’esclavage,” Revue de l’Université de Varsovie, (1977), pp. . 490. Maestri (Filho), Mário José. “Schiavitù coloniale e lotta di classe,” Quaderni di storia, 13 (no. 25) (1986), pp. 115-23. 491. Malowist, Marian. “Les débuts du système de plantations dans la période des grandes découvertes,” Africana Bulletin, 10 (1969), pp. 9-30. 492. Mandle, Jay R. “The Plantation Economy: An Essay in Definition,” Science and Society, 36, 1 (1972), pp. 49-62. 493. Manning, Patrick. (Review essay: Meillassoux, Anthropologie de l’esclavage), African Economic History, 17 (1988), pp. 147-52. 494. Marcic, René. “Sklaverei als ‘Beweis’ gegen Naturrecht und Naturrechtslehre: ein kurzes Gedankengefecht mit Gegnern des Naturrechts und Vorkämpfern einer ‘neuen’ Naturrechtslehre,” Österreichische Zeitschrift für öffentliches Recht, 14, 3-4 (1964), pp. 181-95. 495. Markoe, William M. “The Catholic Church and Slavery,” America, 28, 18 (1923), pp. 415-17. 496. Marotta, M. “Schiavitù,” Grande dizionario enciclopedico (Turin: UTET, 1973), vol. 16, pp. 803-07. 497. Marsh, Henry (Saklatvala, Beram). Slavery and Race. Newton Abbot: David and Charles, 1974. 498. Marsot, G. “(Esclavage) - Droit canonique,” in Abbé G. Jacquemet, ed., Catholicisme: hier, aujourd’hui, demain (Paris: Letouzey et Ané, 1947- ), vol. 4, pp. 420-21. 46 499. Martin, Jean-Pierre. “Les sources de l’anthropologie esclavagiste: le XVIIIe siècle français,” in Martin and Ricard, eds., Une institution particulière, pp. 9-19. 500. Martin, René. “Du Nouveau Monde au monde antique: quelques problèmes de l’esclavage rural,” Ktema, 5 (1980), pp. 161-75. 501. Martínez Díaz, Nelson. “La resistencia a la abolición en los países del Río de la Plata,” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 625-34. 502. Maxwell, John F[rancis]. Slavery and the Catholic Church: The History of the Catholic Teaching Concerning the Moral Legitimacy of the Institution of Slavery. Chichester: Rose, for the Anti-Slavery Society for the Protection of Human Rights, 1975. 503. Meillassoux, Claude. Anthropologie de l’esclavage: le ventre de fer et d’argent. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1986. Translated as The Anthropology of Slavery: The Womb of Iron and Gold (trans. Alide Dasnois; foreword by Paul E. Lovejoy) (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991). 504. Meillassoux, Claude. “Lettre sur l’esclavage,” Dialectiques: revue trimestrielle, 21 (1977), pp. 144-54. Translated as “Correspondence on Slavery,” Economy and Society, 7, 3 (1978), pp. 32131. 505. Melo, Carlos Francisco. Esclavitud. Córdoba (Argentina): Imprenta de la Universidad, 1947. 506. Meltzer, Milton. Slavery from the Rise of Western Civilization to the Renaissance. New York: Cowles, 1971. 507. Menard, Russell R. “Transitions to African Slavery in British America, 1630-1670: Barbados, Virginia and South Carolina,” Indian Historical Review, 15, 1-2 (1988-89), pp. 3349. 508. Menard, Russell R., and Stuart B. Schwartz. “Transitions to African Slavery in the Americas” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 509. *Miers, Suzanne. “Britain and the Suppression of Slavery 1919-39” (Seminar paper, University of London, 1981). 510. Miles, Robert. Capitalism and Unfree Labor: Anomaly or Necessity? London: Tavistock Publications, 1987. 511. Miller, Dean A. “Some Psycho-Social Perceptions of Slavery,” Journal of Social History, 18, 4 (1985), pp. 587-605. 512. Miller, Joseph C. “The African Diaspora in World Historical Perspective,” in Lt. Col. Bryant P. Shaw, ed., Africa in World History: A Teaching Conference (Proceedings of a Conference held April 25-26, 1986, U. S. Air Force Academy) (Colorado Springs: United States Air Force Academy, 1987), pp. 99-126. With Commentary by Melvin E. Page, pp. 127-29. 47 513. Miller, Joseph C. “Comparative Slavery in the Americas,” in John David Smith and Randall M. Miller, eds., Dictionary of Afro-American Slavery (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1986), pp. 123-34. 514. Miller, Joseph C. Slavery: A Comparative Teaching Bibliography. Waltham, Mass.: Crossroads Press, 1977. 515. Miller, Joseph C. “Slavery: A Further Supplementary Bibliography,” Slavery and Abolition, 1, 2 (1980), pp. 199-258. 516. Miller, Joseph C. “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1981),” Slavery and Abolition, 2, 2 (1981), pp. 146-205. 517. Miller, Joseph C. Slavery: A Worldwide Bibliography, 1900-1982. White Plains, N.Y.: Kraus International, 1985. Also see supplements, listed separately following, with collaborators. 1983: Slavery and Abolition (London: Frank Cass), Part I, 4, 2 (1983), pp. 126-69; Part II, 4, 3 (1983), pp. 232-74. 1984: Slavery and Abolition, 6, 1 (1985), pp. 59-92. 1985: Slavery and Abolition, 7, 3 (1986), pp. 315-88. 1986: Slavery and Abolition, 8, 3 (1987), pp. 353-86. 1987: Slavery and Abolition, 9, 2 (1988), pp. 209-45. 1988: Slavery and Abolition, 10, 2 (1989), pp. 231-71. 1989: Slavery and Abolition, 11, 2 (1990), pp. 251-308. 1990: Slavery and Abolition, 12, 3 (1991), pp. 262-316. 1991: Slavery and Abolition, 13, 3 (1992), forthcoming. 518. Miller, Joseph C. “The World According to Meillassoux: A Challenging but Limited Vision (review essay: Claude Meillassoux, Anthropologie de l’esclavage),” International Journal of African Historical Studies, 22, 3 (1989), pp. 473-95. 519. Miller, Joseph C., and Daniel H. Borus. “Slavery: A Supplementary Teaching Bibliography,” Slavery and Abolition, 1, 1 (1980), pp. 63-108. 520. Miller, Joseph C., and David F. Appleby. “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1986)” (Unpublished, 1987). Abridged as “Slavery: Current Bibliographical Supplement (1986),” Slavery and Abolition, 8, 3 (1987), pp. 353-86. 521. Miller, Joseph C., and David F. Appleby. “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1987)” (Unpublished, 1988). Abridged as “Slavery: Current Bibliographical Supplement (1987),” Slavery and Abolition, 9, 2 (1988), pp. 209-45. 522. Miller, Joseph C., and Larissa V. Brown. “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1982): Part I,” Slavery and Abolition, 3, 2 (1982), pp. 163-208; Part II, 3, 3 (1982), pp. 254-96. 48 523. Miller, Joseph C., and Larissa V. Brown. “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1983) (Part I),” Slavery and Abolition, 4, 2 (1983), pp. 126-69; Part II: 4, 3 (1983), pp. 232-74. 524. Miller, Joseph C., and Jena R. Gaines. “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1989),” Slavery and Abolition, 11, 2 (1990), pp. 251-308. 525. Miller, Joseph C., and Randolph C. Head. “Slavery: Annual Bibliography (1988)” (Unpublished, 1989). Abridged as “Slavery: Current Bibliography (1988),” Slavery and Abolition, 10, 2 (1989), pp. 231-71. 526. Miller, Joseph C., and Randolph C. Head. “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1990),” Slavery and Abolition, 12, 3 (1991), pp. 262-316. 527. Miller, Joseph C., and James V. Skalnik. “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1984),” Slavery and Abolition, 6, 1 (1985), pp. 59-92. 528. Miller, Joseph C., and James V. Skalnik. “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1985),” Slavery and Abolition, 7, 3 (1986), pp. 315-88. 529. Minchinton, Walter E. “The Economic Relations between Metropolitan Countries and the Caribbean: Some Problems,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 567-80. 530. Minchinton, Walter E. “Williams and Drescher: Abolition and Emancipation,” Slavery and Abolition, 4, 2 (1983), pp. 81-105. 531. Mintz, Sidney W. “Africa of Latin America: An Unguarded Reflection,” in Manuel Moreno Fraginals, ed., Africa in Latin America: Essays on History, Culture, and Socialization (trans. Leonor Blum) (New York: Holmes and Meier, and Paris: UNESCO, 1984), pp. 286305. 532. Mintz, Sidney W. “History and Anthropology: A Brief Reprise,” in Engerman and Genovese, eds., Race and Slavery, pp. 477-94. 533. Mintz, Sidney W. “Labor and Sugar in Puerto Rico and in Jamaica, 1800-1850,” Comarative Studies in Society and History, 1, 3 (1959), pp. 273-80. Reprinted in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 170-77. Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-207. 534. Mintz, Sidney W. “More on the Peculiar Institution (review essay: Craton, Testing the Chains, and Patterson, Slavery and Social Death),” Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 58, 3-4 (1984), pp. 185-99. 535. Mintz, Sidney W. (Review essay: Elkins, Slavery), American Anthropologist, 63, 3 (1961), pp. 579-87. Reprinted as “Slavery and Emergent Capitalisms,” in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 27-37. Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. A-81. 536. Mintz, Sidney W. “Le rouge et le noir,” Les Temps Modernes, 27 (nos. 299-300) (1971), pp. 2354-61. 537. Mintz, Sidney W. “Slavery and the Afro-American World,” in John F. Szwed, ed., Black America (New York: Basic Books, 1970), pp. 29-44. 49 Revised and reprinted in idem, Caribbean Transformations (Chicago: Aldine, 1974), pp. 59-81. 538. Mintz, Sidney W. “Slavery and the Rise of Peasantries,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 6, 1 (1979), pp. 213-42. Commentaries by Woodville K. Marshall (pp. 243-57), Mary Karasch (pp. 248-51), and Richard Frucht (pp. 252-54). 539. Mintz, Sidney W. “Slavery, Forced Labor and the Plantation System,” in idem, Caribbean Transformations (Chicago: Aldine, 1974), pp. 43-58. 540. Mintz, Sidney W. “The So-Called World System: Local Initiative and Local Response,” Dialectical Anthropology, 2 (1977), pp. 253-70. 541. Mintz, Sidney W. “Toward an Afro-American History,” Cahiers d’histoire mondiale/Journal of World History, 13, 2 (1971), pp. 317-32. Reprinted in Herbert G. Gutman and Gregory S. Kealey, eds., Many Pasts: Readings in American Social History (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 115-30. 542. Mintz, Sidney W. “Was the Plantation Slave a Proletarian?” Review, 2, 1 (1978), pp. 81-100. 543. Mintz, Sidney W., ed., Esclave = facteur de production: l’économie politique de l’esclavage. Paris: Dunod, 1981. For contents see Engerman, Fage, Fogel, Frederickson, Gemery and Hogendorn, Genovese, Greenberg, Gutman, Herskovits, and Wallerstein. 544. Miramón, Alberto. “Los negros del Caribe,” Boletin de historia e antigüedades (Bogotá), 31 (nos. 351-52) (1944), pp. 168-87. 545. 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Morgan, Philip D. “Task and Gang Systems: The Organization of Labor on New World Plantations,” in Stephen Innes, ed., Work and Labor in Early America (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1988), pp. 189-220. Condensed in Elise Marienstras and Barbara Karsky, eds., Autre temps, autre espace: études sur l’Amérique pré-industrielle (Nancy: Presses Universitaires de Nancy, 1986), pp. 147-62. 50 551. Morgan, Philip D. “Three Planters and their Slaves: Perspectives on Slavery in Virginia, South Carolina, and Jamaica, 1750-1790,” in Winthrop D. Jordan and Sheila Skemp, eds., Race and Family in the Colonial South (Jackson and London: University Press of Mississippi, 1987), pp. 37-79. 552. Morgan, Philip D. “Whither the Comparative History of New World Slavery (review essay: Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, Craton, Searching for the Invisible Man, and Higman, Slave Population and Economy),” Journal of Ethnic Studies, 8, 1 (1980), pp. 94109. 553. Mörner, Magnus. “African Slavery in Spanish and Portuguese America: Some Remarks on Historiography and the Present State of Research” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 554. Mörner, Magnus. Buy or Breed? The Alternative Sources of Slave Supply in the Plantation Societies of the New World. Stockholm: Institute of Latin American Studies, Research Paper Series, no. 23, 1980. Also in Rapports du XVe Congrès international des sciences historiques (Bucharest, 1980), vol. 2, pp. 463-78. Translated as “‘Comprar ou criar’: fuentes alternativas de suministro de esclavos en las sociedades plantacionistas del Nuevo Mundo,” Revista de historia de América, no. 91 (1981), pp. 37-81. 555. Mörner, Magnus. “Discussão sôbre raças e classes na América Latina durante o período nacional,” Revista de história (São Paulo), 36 (no. 74) (1968), pp. 349-76. 556. 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B. “A revolução dos negros do Haiti e o Brasil,” História: questões e debates, 3, 4 (1982), pp. 55-63. Republished. 562. Mtubani, Victor C. D. “The Black Voice in Eighteenth-Century Britain: African Writers Against Slavery and the Slave Trade,” Phylon, 45, 2 (1984), pp. 85-97. 51 563. Mufassir, Sulayman Shahid. “Solutions to the Problem of Slavery (Then and Now),” Black World, 19, 9 (1970), pp. 12-18. 564. Mullin, Michael. “British Caribbean and North American Slaves in an Era of War and Revolution, 1775-1807,” in Jeffrey J. Crow and Larry E. Tise, eds., The Southern Experience in the American Revolution (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1978), pp. 235-67. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (351-83). 565. Mullin, Michael. “Women and the Comparative Study of American Negro Slavery,” Slavery and Abolition, 6, 1 (1985), pp. 25-40. 566. Mulvey, Patricia Ann, and Barry A. 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Murray, David R. “The Slave Trade and Slavery in Latin America and the Caribbean (review essay: Craton, Testing the Chains, Turner, Slaves and the Missionaries, Maude, Slavers in Paradise, Conrad, Children of God’s Fire, Eltis and Walvin, eds., Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade, Toplin, Freedom and Prejudice, Castellanos, Abolición de la esclavitud en Popayán, and Colmenares, Popayán, una sociedad esclavista),” Latin American Research Review, 21, 1 (1986), pp. 202-15. 570. Murtaugh, Frank M. “La ‘nuova’ storia economica, vent’anni di dibattiti sulla schiavitù,” Economia e storia, 24, 3 (1977), pp. 325-39. 571. Nash, R. C. “The Last Days of American Colonial Slavery (review essay: Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery, Blackburn, Overthrow of Colonial Slavery, and Ward, British West Indian Slavery),” Ethnic and Racial Studies, 12, 4 (1989), pp. 56773. 572. 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Elena Pérez Ruiz de Velasco) (Madrid: Siglo XXI de España, 1989). 625. Phillips, William D., Jr. “The Old World Background of Slavery in the Americas,” in Solow, ed., Slavery and the Rise of the Atlantic System, pp. 43-61. 626. Phillipson, Odette. L’esclavage de la femme dans le monde contemporain: ou, la prostitution sans masque. Paris: P. Téqui, 1954. 55 627. Phillipson, Odette. Esclavage sexuel, torture, amour. Paris: Téqui, 1976. 628. Pieterse, Jan Nederveen. “Slavery and the Triangle of Emancipation,” Race and Class, 30, 2 (1988), pp. 1-21. 629. Pipes, Daniel. “The Strategic Rationale for Military Slavery,” Journal of Strategic Studies, 2, 1 (1979), pp. 34-46. 630. Piras, Giorgio. “Studi recenti sul problema storico della schiavitù,” Storia contemporanea, 4, 2 (1973), pp. 345-59. 631. Plantation Society in the Americas: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Tropical and Subtropical History and Culture. Vol. 1, no. l (February, 1979). 632. Plimmer, Charlotte, and Denis Plimmer. 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Larose & L. Tenin, 1907. 648. Quinney, Valerie. “Decisions on Slavery, the Slave Trade, and Civil Rights for Negroes in the Early French Revolution,” Journal of Negro History, 55, 2 (1970), pp. 117-30. 649. Ratsivalaka, Gilbert. “A la recherche de la liberté: contribution à l’étude du marronnage des esclaves malgaches dans les pays esclavagistes aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles (Mascareignes et Jamaïque),” Taloha (Civilisation de Madagascar: art et archéologie, anthropologie sociale), 8 (1979), pp. 111-37. (Université de Madagascar, 1979). 650. *Ravin, Anne Marie. “Le ‘cimarron’ dans le Nouveau Monde” (Thèse de maîtrise, Paris III, 1975). 651. *Ray, James Lee. “The Abolition of Slavery and the End of International War,” International Organization, 43 (1989), pp. 405-39. 652. Razoharinoro-Andriamboavonjy. “L’esclave: moyen d’exploitation de la terre,” Tantara, 3 (1975), pp. 57-92. 653. Reed, Harry A. “Slavery in Ashanti and Colonial South Carolina,” Black World, 20, 4 (1971), pp. 37-40. 654. Reuck, Anthony de, and Julie Knight, eds. Caste and Race: Comparative Approaches. London: Ciba Foundation, 1967. For contents see Elkins and Leach. 655. Rice, C. Duncan. “Critique of the Eric Williams Thesis: The Anti-Slavery Interest and the Sugar Duties, 1841-1853,” in Centre of African Studies, University of Edinburgh, Transatlantic Slave Trade, pp. 44-60. 656. Rice, C. Duncan. The Rise and Fall of Black Slavery. New York: Harper and Row, 1975. 657. Richardson, Patrick. Empire and Slavery. New York: Harper and Row, 1968. 658. Riddell, William Renwick. “When Human Beings were Real Estate,” Canadian Magazine, 57 (1921), pp. 147-49. 57 659. Riddell, William Renwick. “Le Code Noir,” Journal of Negro History, 10, 3 (1925), pp. 321-29. 660. Rinchon, Dieudonné. “Le christianisme devant l’institution servile,” in Abbé G. Jacquemet, ed., Catholicisme hier, aujourd’hui, demain (Paris: Lefouzey et Ainé, 1947), vol. 4, fasc. 14, cols. 415-20. 661. Rinchon, Dieudonné. “Comment travaillaient les négriers qui ont assis la fortune de l’Europe,” Terre entière, no. 39 (1970), pp. 21-61. 662. Rinchon, Dieudonné. “Esclavage: notion et origines,” in Abbé G. Jacquemet, ed., Catholicisme: hier, aujourd’hui, demain (Paris: Letouzey et Ané, 1947- ), vol. 4, pp. 414-15. 663. Robinson, Cedric J. “Capitalism, Slavery and Bourgeois Historiography,” History Workshop: A Journal of Socialist and Feminist Historians, 23 (1987), pp. 122-40. 664. Rodney, Walter. “Slavery and Underdevelopment,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 6, 1 (1979), pp. 275-86. Commentary by Orlando Patterson (pp. 287-92). 665. Rodney, Walter. “Upper Guinea and the Significance of the Origins of Africans Enslaved in the New World,” Journal of Negro History, 54, 4 (1969), pp. 327-45. 666. Romero, Patricia. “The Slave Traders’ Images of Slaves,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 286-92. 667. Roper, John Herbert, and Lolita G. Brockington. “Slave Revolt, Slave Debate: A Comparison,” Phylon, 45, 2 (1984), pp. 98-110. 668. Roseberry, William. “La falta de brazos: Land and Labor in the Coffee Economies of Nineteenth-Century Latin America,” Theory and Society, 20, 3 (1991), pp. 351-81. With commentary by Sidney W. Mintz, pp. 383-92. 669. Rubin, Vera, and Arthur Tuden, eds. Comparative Perspectives on Slavery in New World Plantation Societies (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, vol. 292). New York: New York Academy of Sciences, 1977. For contents see Anstey, Aptheker, Bean, Berlin, Brathwaite (2), Campbell, Costa, Curtin, Dean, Drescher, Duke, Engerman (2), Fernandes, Frederickson, Frucht, Gemery and Hogendorn, Greenfield, Groot, Gutman, G. Hall, N. Hall, Higman (2), Jordan, Knight, Lamur, Lara, Lowenthal and Clarke, Manigat, Martínez Montiel, Minchinton, Moreno Fraginals, Mullin, Padgug, Patterson, Pollack-Eltz, Price, Postma, Reis, Rice, Roberts, Romero, Rubin and Tuden, Scarano, Schuler, Schulman, Sheridan, Sio, Van Den Boogaart and Emmer, Van Opstall, Vila (Vilar), and Walvin 670. Russell-Wood, A. J. R. “The Black Family in the Americas,” Societas, 8, 1 (1978), pp. 1-38. Revised as “Domestic Behaviour: Family and Kinship,” in idem, Black Man in Slavery and Freedom, pp. 161-97. 671. Saco, José Antonio. Historia de la esclavitud desde los tiempos más remotos hasta nuestros dias. Paris: Tipografía Lahure, 1875-77. 2nd ed. 4 vols. Havana, 1936-45. 672. Saklatvala, Beram. Slavery and Race: A Study of Slavery and Its Legacy for Today. Newton Abbot: David and Charles, 1974. 58 673. Salvatore, Ricardo D. “Modes of Labor Control in Cattle-Ranching Economies: California, Southern Brazil, and Argentina, 1820-1860,” Journal of Economic History, 51, 2 (1991), pp. 441-51. 674. Sandoval, Alonso de. Un tratado sobre la esclavitud. Introduction, etc., by Enriqueta Vila Vilar. Madrid: Alianza, 1987. 675. *San Miguel, Pedro. “La rentabilidad de la esclavitud: un debate historiográfico,” Historia y sociedad (Río Piedras), 1 (1988), pp. 155- . 676. Salomon, Robert. L’esclavage en droit comparé juif et romain. Paris: Librairie E. Leroux, 1931. 677. Sanders, Ronald. Lost Tribes and Promised Lands. Boston: Little Brown, 1978. 678. Saunderson, Barbara M. “The Encyclopédie and Colonial Slavery,” British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 7, 1 (1984), pp. 15-38. 679. Sawyer, Roger. Children Enslaved. London: Routledge, 1988. 680. Sawyer, Roger. Slavery in the Twentieth Century. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1986. 681. Schapiro, Herbert. “Eugene Genovese, Marxism, and the Study of Slavery,” Journal of Ethnic Studies, 9, 4 (1982), pp. 87-100. 682. Schmidt, Gerhard. “Slavery,” Sociologia (São Paulo), 28, 2-3 (1966), pp. 173-92. 683. *Schmidt, M., and M. de Lara. (Unpublished paper on women in slave societies presented to Conférence franco-néerlandais sur la thème “La femme dans la société coloniale”, September 1982). 684. Schmitz, Mark D., and Donald F. Schaefer. “Slavery, Freedom, and the Elasticity of Substitution,” Explorations in Economic History, 15, 3 (1978), pp. 327-37. 685. Schoelcher, Victor. Esclavage et colonisation. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1948. 686. Schooler, Carmi. “Serfdom’s Legacy: An Ethnic Continuum,” American Journal of Sociology, 81, 6 (1976), pp. 1265-86. 687. Schuler, Monica. “Afro-American Slave Culture,” Historical Reflections/ Réflexions historiques, 6, 1 (1979), pp. 121-37. Commentaries by Mary Karasch (pp. 138-40), Richard Price (pp. 141-49), Edward Kamau Brathwaite (pp. 150-56). 688. Schuler, Monica. “Commentary (Slave Images and Identities),” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 376-78. 689. Schuler, Monica [Elaine]. “Slave Revolts in the Caribbean and Northern South America” (MA thesis, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1964). 690. Scott, Rebecca J. “La dinámica de la emancipación y la formación de la sociedad postabolicionista: el caso cubano en una perspectiva comparativa,” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 345-52. 691. Scott, Rebecca J. “Reshaping Class Relations: The Sugar Regions of Louisiana, Cuba, and Brazil After Emancipation” (Paper presented to conference on “Cultivation and 59 Culture: Labor and the Shaping of Slave Life in the Americas”, University of Maryland, 1214 April 1989). 692. Scott, Rebecca J. “Slavery, Population, and Progress (review essay: Davis, Slavery and Human Progress, Higman, Slave Populations of the British Caribbean, Cox, Free Coloreds in Slave Societies, Scarano, Sugar and Slavery in Puerto Rico),” Latin American Research Review, 22, 2 (1987), pp. 215-26. 693. Sewell, Richard H. “Slavery in the Americas: An Essay Review (of Klein, Slavery in the Americas, McManus, History of Negro Slavery in New York, and Goveia, Slave Society in the British Leeward Islands),” Wisconsin Magazine of History, 51, 3 (1968), pp. 238-43. 694. Shahabuddeen, M. Slavery and Historiographical Rectification. Georgetown: Guyana Commemoration Commission, 1984. 695. Sheridan, Richard B. “Eric Williams and Capitalism and Slavery: A Biographical and Historiographical Essay,” in Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery, pp. 317-45. 696. Shinn, Roger L. “Slavery,” in James F. Childress and John Macquarrie, eds., The Westminster Dictionary of Christian Ethics (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1986), pp. 589-90. 697. Shlomowitz, Ralph. “On Punishments and Rewards in Coercive Labour Systems: Comparative Perspectives,” Slavery and Abolition, 12, 2 (1991), pp. 97-102. 698. Shtaerman, Elena M. “Die ideologische Vorbereitung des Zusammenbruchs der Produktionsweise der Sklavereigesellschaft,” Klio, 60, 2 (1978), pp. 225-34. 699. Sichirollo, Livio, ed. Schiavitù antica e moderna: problema, storia, istituzioni. Naples: Guida, 1979. For contents see Amodio, Biezunska-Malowist, Cazzaniga, Ferriolo, Finley (2), Gernet, Lauffer, Szegedy-Maszak, Vidal-Naquet, and Vogt. 700. Siegel, Bernard J. “Some Methodological Considerations for a Comparative History of Slavery,” American Anthropologist, 47, 3 (1945), pp. 357-92. 701. *Silié, Rubén. “Esclavitud y prejuicio de color,” Revue du CERC (Centre d’études et de recherches caraïbéennes, Université des Antilles - Guyane), 6 (1989), pp. ( ). 702. Silver, Timothy H. A New Face on the Countryside: Indians, Colonists and Slaves in South Atlantic Forests, 1500-1800. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1990. 703. Simon, Kathleen. Slavery. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1929. 704. Singleton, Theresa A. “An Archaeological Framework for Slavery and Emancipation, 1740-1880” in Mark P. Leone and Parker B. Potter, Jr., eds., The Recovery of Meaning: Historical Archaeology in the Eastern United States (Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1988), pp. 345-70. 705. Singleton, Theresa A., ed. The Archaeology of Slavery and Plantation Life. New York: Academic Press, 1985. For contents see Armstrong, Friedlander, Jones, Lange and Carlson, Lange and Handler, K. Lewis, L. Lewis, Moore, Order and Nekola, Reitz/Gibby/Rathbun, Singleton, and Wheaton and Garrow. 60 706. Sio, Arnold. “Commentary (Social Institutions and Slave Societies),” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 284-85. 707. Sio, Arnold. “Interpretations of Slavery: The Slave Status in the Americas,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 7, 3 (1965), pp. 289-308. Reprinted in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 96-112; also in Weinstein and Gatell, eds., American Negro Slavery (1st ed.), pp. 310-32; also in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (385-404). Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-274. 708. Sio, Arnold. “Society, Slavery and the Slaves (review essay: Genovese, Political Economy of Slavery, Goveia, Slavery Society in the British Leeward Islands, and Davis, Problem of Slavery),” Social and Economic Studies, 16, 3 (1967), pp. 330-44. 709. Skidmore, Thomas E. “O Negro no Brasil e nos Estados Unidos,” Argumento (Rio de Janeiro), 1, 1 (1973), pp. 25-45. 710. “Sklaverei in der modernen Geschichte,” Geschichte und Gesellschaft, 16, 2 (1990), special issue. For contents see Drescher, Klein, Kolchin, and Puhle. 711. Skydsgaard, Jens Erik. “Betragtninger over Poul Nørlund, E. D. Genovese og Moses I. Finley,” in Andersen, ed., Slaveri og avvikling i et komparativt perspektiv, pp. 19-31. 712. Slavery and Abolition (London: Frank Cass, 1980 - ). 713. Slavery and the Slave Trade. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, n.d. (Includes Reports from the British House of Commons Select Committees on the Slave Trade 1810-1830, vol. 1-8; Classified correspondence, vols. 9-60; General papers on slavery, vols. 61-95.) 714. Slicher van Bath, B. H. “De historische demografie van Latijns Amerika: problemen en resultaten van onderzoek,” Tijdschrift voor geschiedenis (Leiden), 92, 4 (1979), pp. 527-56. 715. Small, Stephen Augustus. “Racial Differentiation in the Slave Era: A Comparative Study of People of ‘Mixed-Race’ in Jamaica and Georgia” (PhD diss., University of California - Berkeley, 1989). 716. Smith, G. W. “Slavery, Contentment, and Social Freedom,” Philosophical Quarterly, 27 (no. 108) (1977), pp. 236-48. 717. Smith, John David. Black Slavery in the Americas: An Interdisciplinary Bibliography, 1865-1980. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1982. 718. Smith, Michael G. “Slavery and Emancipation in Two Societies,” Social and Economic Studies, 3, 3-4 (1954), pp. 239-90. Reprinted in idem, ed., The Plural Society in the British West Indies (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1965), pp. 116-61. 719. Smith, Roland M. “The Comparative Approach to the Study of Slavery,” Black Lives, 2 (1972), pp. 39-46. 61 720. Solano, Francisco de, and Agustín Guimerá, eds. Esclavitud y derechos humanos: la lucha por la libertad del negro en el siglo XIX. Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, Centro de Estudios Historicos, 1990. For contents see Armario Sánchez, Armas Ayala, Arroyo Jiménez, Cabrero Fernández, Capela, Cayuela Fernández, Cortés Alonso, Daget, Estebán Deive, Fernández Canales, Fradera, Franco Silva, Guerrero Cano, Guimera Ravina, Hernández Ruigómez and González de Heredia y de Oñate, Hernández Sandoica, Laviña, Lobo Cabrera, López-Ocón Cabrera, Martínez Carreras, Martínez Díaz, Mascareñas, Minchinton, Morales Carrión, Moreno García, Navarro Azcue, Pérez Murillo, Pozuelo Mascaraque, Rodao and Togores, Roldán de Montaud, Saiz Pastor, Scott, Sixirei Paredes, Vila Vilar, and Yacou. 721. Solow, Barbara L. “Capitalism and Slavery in the Exceedingly Long Run,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 17, 4 (1987), pp. 711-37. Reprinted in Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery, pp. 51-77. 722. Solow, Barbara L. “Caribbean Slavery and British Growth: The Eric Williams Hypothesis,” Journal of Development Economics, 17, 1-2 (1985), pp. 99-ll5. 723. Solow, Barbara L. “Introduction,” in idem, ed., Slavery and the Rise of the Atlantic System, pp. 1-20. 724. Solow, Barbara L. “Slavery and Colonization,” in idem, ed., Slavery and the Rise of the Atlantic System, pp. 21-42. 725. Solow, Barbara L., ed. Slavery and the Rise of the Atlantic System. Cambridge, Mass.: W. E. B. DuBois Institute for Afro-American Research, and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991. For contents see Alencastro, Eltis, Emmer, Galenson, Knight, Miller, O’Brien and Engerman, Phillips, Price, Richardson, Solow (2), and Villiers. 726. Solow, Barbara L., and Stanley L. Engerman. “British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery: The Legacy of Eric Williams: An Introduction,” in Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery, pp. 1-23. 727. Solow, Barbara L., and Stanley L. Engerman, eds. British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery: The Legacy of Eric Williams. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1987. For contents see Beckles, Carrington, Craton, Davis, Drescher, Dunn, Green, Inikori, Richardson, Sheridan, Solow, Solow and Engerman, Temperly, and Wright. Selected papers also in “Caribbean Slavery and British Capitalism,” special issue of Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 17, 4 (1987) (with “Introduction,” pp. 707-09). 728. Souza, Dalila de. “Physicians’ Perceptions of Black Health in the United States and Brazil” (Paper presented at American Historical Association Annual Meeting, Cincinnati, 1988). 729. Späth, Eberhard. “Daniel Defoe and Slavery” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 62 730. Steger, Hanns-Albert. “Revolutionäre Hintergründe des kreolischen Synkretismus,” Internationales Jahrbuch für Religions-Soziologie, 6 (1970), pp. 99-141. 731. Stevens, William. The Slave in History. London, 1904. 732. Stewart, Larry. “The Edge of Utility: Slaves and Smallpox in the Early Eighteenth Century,” Medical History, 29, 1 (1985), pp. 54-70. 733. Strong, Robert A. “Alexis de Tocqueville and the Abolition of Slavery,” Slavery and Abolition, 8, 2 (1987), pp. 204-15. 734. Symposium on Caste and Race: Comparative Approaches (London, 1966). Anthony de Reuck and Julie Knight, eds. London: Ciba Foundation, 1967. For contents see listing under Reuck. 735. Sypher, Wylie. Guinea’s Captive Kings: British Antislavery Literature of the Eighteenth Century. New York: Octagon Books, l969. 736. Szabó, I. “Serfdom - Peasantry - Concept, Terminology, Social Structure,” Ethnografia, 76, 1 (1965), pp. 10-31. (In Hungarian with Russian and English summaries) 737. Tannenbaum, Frank. “A Note on the Economic Interpretation of History,” Political Science Quarterly, 61, 2 (1946), pp. 247-53. 738. Tannenbaum, Frank. Slave and Citizen: The Negro in the Americas. New York: Knopf, 1947. 739. *Taylor, Quintard. “Slave Family Life on the Fazenda and Plantation: A Comparison of Brazil and the United States, 1750-1850,” Proceedings of the First Annual Conference on Records, Family History and Genealogy (Provo: Brigham Young University Press, 1980), vol. 11, pp. ( ). 740. Taylor, Sally. “Marx and Greeley on Slavery and Labor,” Journalism History, 6, 4 (1979-80), pp. 103-06. 741. Temperley, Howard. “Capitalism, Slavery, and Ideology,” Past and Present, 75 (1977), pp. 94-118. 742. Temperley, Howard. “Eric Williams and Abolition: The Birth of a New Orthodoxy,” in Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery, pp. 22957. 743. Temperley, Howard. “The Ideology of Antislavery,” in Walvin and Eltis, eds., Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade, pp. 21-36. 744. Terborg-Penn, Rosalyn. “Black Women in Resistance: A Cross-Cultural Perspective,” in Okihiro, ed., In Resistance, pp. 188-209. 745. Thomas, John I. “Historical Antecedents and Impact of Blacks on the Indigenous White Population of Brazil and the American South, 1500-1800,” Ethnohistory, 19, 2 (1972), pp. 147-69. 746. Thompson, Edgar T. “The Plantation” (PhD diss., University of Chicago, 1932). 63 747. *Thompson, Edgar T. “The Plantation: A Worldwide Institution,” in Sue Eakin and John Tarver, eds., Plantations Around the World: Proceedings of the First World Plantation Conference (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Agricultural Center, 1986), pp. 1-8. 748. Thompson, John Malcolm. “In Dubious Service: The Recruitment and Stabilization of West African Maritime Labor by the French Colonial Military, 1659-1900” (PhD diss., University of Minnesota, 1989). 749. Thompson, Richard H. “The Ox, the Slave and the Worker: A Pedagogic Exercise in Marx’s Labor Theory of Value,” Dialectical Anthropology, 8, 3 (1983), pp. 237-40. 750. Thompson, Vincent Bakpetu. The Making of the African Diaspora in the Americas 1441-1900. Essex: Longmans, 1987. 751. Thompson, Vincent Bakpetu. “Religion and Slavery in World History” (Unpublished paper, World Conference on Slavery and Society in History, Ahmadu Bello University, Kaduna, Nigeria, 26-30 March 1990). 752. Thornton, John K. Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World, 1400-1680. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992. 753. Thorpe, Earle E. “Chattel Slavery and Concentration Camps,” Negro History Bulletin, 25, 8 (1962), pp. 171-76. Reprinted in Lane, ed., Debate Over Slavery, pp. 23-42; also in Bracey, Meier, and Rudwick, eds., American Slavery, pp. 86-98; also in Rose, ed., Americans from Africa, vol. 1, pp. 155-69. 754. Thurnwald, R. “Sklave,” in Max Ebert, ed., Reallexikon der Vorgeschichte (Berlin: W. de Grueyter, 1924-32), vol. 12, pp. 209-28. 755. Tomich, Dale W. “Original Accumulation, Colonial Slavery, and the Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism” (Unpublished paper, Binghamton, New York, 1981). 756. Tomich, Dale W. “The ‘Second Slavery’: Bonded Labor and the Transformation of the Nineteenth-Century World Economy,” in Francisco O. Ramirez, ed., Rethinking the Nineteenth Century: Contradictions and Movements (New York: Greenwood, 1988), pp. 103-17. 757. Töpfer, Bernhard. “Zur Problematik der vorkapitalistischen Klassengesellschaften,” Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte (1967), pt. 4, pp. 259-86. 758. Toplin, Robert Brent. “The Specter of Crisis: Slaveholder Reactions to Abolitionism in the United States and Brazil,” Civil War History, 18, 2 (1972), pp. 129-38. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Comparative Issues in Slavery, pp. (431-40). 759. Toplin, Robert Brent, ed. Slavery and Race Relations in Latin America. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1974. 760. *Trouillot, Michel-Rolph. “Culture on the Edges: The Afro-American Plantation as Cultural Matrix” (Unpublished paper, Colloquium on “The Plantation System in the Americas,” Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, 27-29 April 1989). 761. Turbet-Delof, Guy. “Un texte antiesclavagiste publié en 1689,” Les cahiers de Tunisie, 16 (1968), pp. 111-18. 64 762. *Turley, David. Slavery. Cambridge: Blackwell, 1992 (forthcoming). 763. Turner, Lorenzo D. “African Survivals in the New World with Special Emphasis on the Arts,” in John A. Davis, ed., Africa Seen by American Negroes (Paris: Présence Africaine, 1958), pp. 101-16. Reprinted in Haynes, ed., Blacks in White America, pp. 63-76. 764. United Nations. Secretary-General. L’esclavage, la traite des esclaves, et les autres formes de servitude. New York: United Nations, 1953. 765. United Nations. Secretary-General. Esclavage: rapport complémentaire. New York: United Nations, 1954. 766. Van den Berghe, Pierre. “The Peculiar Institution: Patterson and Foner on Slavery and Abolition (review essay: Slavery and Social Death and on Nothing But Freedom),” Race and Ethnic Studies, 7, 2 (1984), pp. 301-05. 767. Vendrame, Calisto. A escravidão na Bíblia: com uma reflexo preliminar sobre a escravidão no mundo greco-romano e na civilização ocidental. São Paulo: Ática, 1981. 768. Verlinden, Charles. “Esclavitud medieval en Europa y esclavitud colonial en América,” Revista de la Universidad Nacional de Córdoba: Homenaje a Monseñor P. Cabrera (1958), vol. 1, pp. 177-91. Translated as “Esclavage médiéval en Europe et esclavage colonial en Amérique,” Cahiers de l’Institut des hautes études de l’Amérique latine, 6 (1964), pp. 27-45. Also translated as “Medieval Slavery in Europe and Colonial Slavery in America (trans. Yvonne Freccero),” in idem, The Beginnings of Modern Colonization (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1970), pp. 33-51. 769. Verlinden, Charles. “Les origines coloniales de la civilisation atlantique: antécédents et types de structure,” Cahiers d’histoire mondiale/Journal of World History, 1, 2 (1953), pp. 378-98. 770. Verlinden, Charles. “Précédents et parallèles européens de l’esclavage colonial,” O Instituto: Revista científica e literária (Coimbra), 113 (1949), pp. 113-53. 771. Verlinden, Charles. “Le problème de la continuité en histoire coloniale: de la colonisation médiévale à la colonisation moderne,” Revista de Indias, 11 (nos. 43-44) (1951), pp. 219-36. 772. Verna, Paul. “La revolución haitiana y sus manifestaciones socio-juridicas en el Caribe y Venezuela,” Boletín de la Academia nacional de la historia (Caracas), 676 (no. 268) (1984), pp. 741-52. 773. Vignols, Léon. “Etudes négrières de 1774 à 1928,” Revue d’histoire économique et sociale, 16, 1 (1928), pp. 5-11. 774. Vila Vilar, Enriqueta. “Conferencias sobre la esclavitud en conmemoración de la Independencia de los Estados Unidos, Nueva York, 24-27 de mayo de 1976,” Historiografía y bibliografía americanistas, 19-20 (1975-76), pp. 171-75. 775. Vila Vilar, Enriqueta. “Presencia y fuerza del esclavo africano en América: trata, mano de obra y cimarronaje,” in Francisco de Solano, coord., Estudios sobre la abolición de la 65 esclavitud (Anexos de Revista de Indias, 2) (Madrid: Centro de Estudios Históricos, Departamento de Historia de América, 1986), pp. 104-20. 776. Voelz, Peter Michael. “Slave and Soldier: The Military Impact of Blacks in the Colonial Americas” (PhD diss., University of California - Los Angeles, 1978). 777. Wagley, Charles. “Plantation-America: A Culture Sphere,” in Vera Rubin, ed., Caribbean Studies: A Symposium (Seattle, 1960) (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1960), pp. 3-13. Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-306. 778. Walvin, James. “Black Slavery in the 17th and 18th Centuries: The Historical Implications for the Black Diaspora,” in Aubrey W. Bonnett and G. Llewellyn Watson, eds., Emerging Perspectives on the Black Diaspora (Lanham: University Press of America, 1990), pp. 15-21. 779. Walvin, James. England, Slaves and Freedom, 1776-1838. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1986. 780. Walvin, James. “Europe and Black Slavery” (Unpublished paper presented to the Colloque International sur la Traite des Noirs, Nantes, 1985). 781. Walvin, James. “The Impact of Slavery on British Radical Politics: 1787-1838,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 343-55. 782. Walvin, James. “The Public Campaign in England against Slavery, 1787-1834,” in Walvin and Eltis, eds., Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade, pp. 63-82. 783. Walvin, James. “Recurring Themes: White Images of Black Life During and After Slavery,” Slavery and Abolition, 5, 2 (1984), pp. 118-40. 784. Walvin, James. Slavery and the Slave Trade: A Short Illustrated History. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1983. 785. Walvin, James, ed. Slavery and British Society, 1780-1846. London: Macmillan, 1981. For contents, see Craton, Geggus, and Higman. 786. Watson, Alan D. Slave Law in the Americas. Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia Press, 1989. 787. Watson, James L. “Slavery as an Institution, Open and Closed Systems,” in Watson, ed., Asian and African Systems of Slavery, pp. 1-15. 788. Watson, James L., ed. Asian and African Systems of Slavery. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1980. For contents see Benedict, Bloch, Burnham, Caplan, Goody, Levine, Morris, Shepherd, and Watson (2). 789. Wawrzyczek, Irmina Violetta. “Unfree Labour in Early Modern English Culture: England and Colonial Virginia” (PhD diss., Uniwersytet Marii Curie-Sklodowskiej (Lublin), 1988). 790. Wax, Darold D. “Whither the Comparative History of Slavery?” Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 80, 1 (1972), pp. 85-93. 66 791. Wendel, Hugo C. M. “The Attitude of the Church Toward Slavery,” Lutheran Church Review, 30, 2 (1911), pp. 352-64. 792. Werner, Ernst. “De l’esclavage à la féodalité: la périodisation de l’histoire mondiale,” Annales: économies, sociétés, civilisations, 17, 5 (1962), pp. 930-39. 793. Wertz, Dorothy C. “Women and Slavery: A Cross-Cultural Perspective,” International Journal of Women’s Studies, 7, 4 (1984), pp. 372-84. 794. Wesler, Kit W. “West African Perspectives on Afro-American Archaeology” (Paper presented at the Fifth Annual Symposium on Ohio Valley Urban and Historic Archaeology, Paducah, Kentucky, March 1987). 795. *Westermarck, E. Die Sklaverei. Leipzig: Gontzsch, 1909. 796. Whitman, Daniel. “Slavery and the Rights of Frenchmen: View of Montesquieu, Rousseau, and Raynal,” French Colonial Studies, 1 (1977), pp. 17-33. 797. Williams, Eric. “The Blackest Thing in Slavery Was Not The Black Man,” Revista/Review Interamericana, 3, 1 (1973), pp. 1-23. 798. Williams, Eric. Capitalism and Slavery. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press, 1944. 799. Williams, Eric. “The Origin of Negro Slavery,” in Frucht, ed., Black Society in the New World, pp. 3-25. (Reprinted from Capitalism and Slavery.) 800. Williams, Mary M. “The Treatment of Negro Slaves in the Brazilian Empire: A Comparison with the United States of America,” Journal of Negro History, 15, 2 (1930), pp. 315-36. 801. Wilson, Thomas W., and Clarence E. Grim. “Biohistory of Slavery and Blood Pressure Differences in Blacks Today: A Hypothesis,” Hypertension, 17 (I Suppl.) (1991), 122-28. 802. Wilson, William J. “Slavery, Paternalism and White Hegemony,” American Journal of Sociology, 81, 5 (1976), pp. 1190-98. 803. Wimmer, Wolfgang. Die Sklaven: Herr und Knecht - Eine Sozialgeschichte mit Gegenwart. Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1979. 804. Winks, Robin W., ed. Slavery: A Comparative Perspective: Readings on Slavery from Ancient Times to the Present. New York: New York University Press, 1972. For contents see Averkieva, Davidson, Degler, Elkins, Finley, Fisher and Fisher, Genovese, Gullick, Handlin, Harris, Hoetink, H. Klein, Kloosterboer, Patterson, Seng, Shackleton, Stein, Tannenbaum, and Williams. 805. Wirz, Albert. Sklaverei und kapitalistisches Weltsystem. Frankfurt-am-Main: Suhrkamp, 1984. 806. Woodward, C. Vann. “The Lash and the Knout (review essay: Kolchin, Unfree Labor),” New York Review of Books, 34, 18 (19 Nov. 1987), pp. 38-43. 807. Woodward, C. Vann. “Protestant Slavery in a Catholic World,” in American Counterpoint, pp. 47-77. 67 808. Work, Monroe Nathan. A Bibliography of the Negro in Africa and America. New York: H. W. Wilson, 1928. 809. “The World of Slavery,” special issue of the Indian Historical Review, 15, 1-2 (198889). For contents see Ahmad, Carter, Chakravarti, Conrad, Craton, Ferry, Geggus, Habib, Inikori, H. S. Klein, M. A. Klein, Meillassoux, Menard, Miller, Prasad, Price, Sareen, Scarano, and Schwartz. 810. Wright, David. Slavery, Abolition and Emancipation: Black Slaves and the British Empire: A Thematic Documentary. New York, 1976. 811. Wright, Gavin. “Capitalism and Slavery on the Islands: A Lesson from the Mainland,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 17, 4 (1987), pp. 851-70. Reprinted in Solow and Engerman, eds., British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery, pp. 283-302. 812. Wright, Gavin. “The Economics and Politics of Slavery and Freedom” (Unpublished paper presented to the conference on “The Meaning of Freedom”, University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg, 25-26 Aug. 1988). 813. Wyatt-Brown, Bertram. “Stanley Elkins’ Slavery: The Antislavery Interpretation Reexamined,” American Quarterly, 25, 2 (1973), pp. 154-76. 814. Yacovone, Donald. “The Fruits of Africa: Slavery, Emancipation, and AfroAmerican Culture (review essay: Stuckey, Slave Culture, Davis, Slavery and Human Progress, Davis, From Homicide to Slavery, and Filler, Crusade Against Slavery),” American Quarterly, 40, 4 (1988), pp. 569-76. 815. Yeo, Cedric A. “The Economics of Roman and American Slavery,” Finanz-archiv, 13, 3 (1951-52), pp. 445-85. 816. Zavala, Silvio Arturo. Servidumbre natural y libertad cristiana, según los tratadistas españoles de los siglos XVI y XVII. Buenos Aires: Universidad Nacional de Buenos Aires, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, 1944. (Publicaciones del Instituto de investigaciones historicas, no. 87) 2nd ed. México: Editorial Porr a, 1975. 817. Zora Marcos, Pablo. Encadenados. La Coruña: Adara, 1974. II. NORTH AMERICA 1. General and Comparative 818. “Absentee Ownership of Slaves in the United States in 1830,” Journal of Negro History, 9, 2 (1924), pp. 196-231. 819. Adeleke, Tunde. “Ambivalent Force: Religion and the Afro-American Struggle Against Slavery: Martin R. Delany’s Crusade, 1847-1849” (Unpublished paper, World Conference on Slavery and Society in History, Ahmadu Bello University, Kaduna, Nigeria, 26-30 March 1990). 68 820. Aitken, Hugh G. J., ed. Did Slavery Pay? Readings in the Economics of Black Slavery in the United States. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1971. For contents see Cairnes, Conrad and Meyer (2), Dowd (2), Engerman, Evans, Genovese, Govan, Gray, Phillips, Russel, Saraydar (2), Sutch, Woodman, and Yasuba. 821. Allen, Cuthbert Edward. “The Slavery Question in Catholic Newspapers, 18501865,” Historical Records and Studies: U.S. Catholic Historical Society, 26 (1936), pp. 99-169. 822. America, Richard F., ed. The Wealth of Races: The Present Value of Benefits from Past Injustices. New York: Greenwood Press, 1990. 823. “American Slavery and the Conflict of Laws (Note),” Columbia Law Review, 71, 1 (1971), pp. 74-99. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 452-77. 824. Anderson, James D. “Aunt Jemima in Dialectics: Genovese on Slave Culture (review essay: Roll, Jordan, Roll),” Journal of Negro History, 61, 1 (1976), pp. 99-114. 825. Anderson, James D. “Political and Scholarly Interests in the ‘Negro Personality’: A Review of The Slave Community,” in Gilmore, ed., Revisiting Blassingame’s The Slave Community, pp. 123-34. 826. Andrews, William L. “The Evolving Image of Slavery in the Nineteenth-Century Slave Narrative of the United States” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 827. Andrews, William L. “The Representation of Slavery and the Rise of AfroAmerican Literary Realism, 1865-1920,” in Deborah E. McDowell and Arnold Rampersad, eds., Slavery and the Literary Imagination (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989), pp. 62-80. 828. Anthony, Carl. “The Big House and the Slave Quarters, Part l: Prelude to New World Architecture,” Landscape, 20, 3 (1976), pp. 8-19; “Part 2: African Contributions to the New World,” Landscape, 21, 1 (1976), pp. 9-15. 829. Aptheker, Herbert. “Additional Data on American Maroons,” Journal of Negro History, 32, 4 (1947), pp. 452-60. 830. Aptheker, Herbert. “American Negro Slave Revolts,” Science and Society, 1, 4 (1937), pp. 512-38; 2, 3 (1938), pp. 386-91. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance and Runaways, pp.(30-56). 831. Aptheker, Herbert. American Negro Slave Revolts. New York: Columbia University Press, 1943. 832. Aptheker, Herbert. “American Negro Slave Revolts: Fifty Years Gone,” Science and Society, 51, 1 (1987), pp. 68-71. 833. Aptheker, Herbert. “Commentary (Slave Revolts),” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 491-94. 834. Aptheker, Herbert. “Comments on Genovese (Legacy of Slavery),” Studies on the Left, 6, 6 (1966), pp. 27-35. 69 Revised as “Slavery, the Negro and Militancy,” Political Affairs, 46, 2 (1967), pp. 3643. 835. Aptheker, Herbert. “Heavenly Days in Dixie: or, The Time of Their Lives (review essay: Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross),” Political Affairs, 53, 6 (1974), pp. 40-54. 836. Aptheker, Herbert. “Maroons within the Present Limits of the United States,” Journal of Negro History, 24, 2 (1939), pp. 167-84. Reprinted in Price, ed., Maroon Societies, pp. 151-67; also in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp.(65-82). Slightly revised as “Slave Guerrilla Warfare” in To Be Free: Studies in American Negro History (New York: International Publishers, 1948), pp. 11-30. 837. Aptheker, Herbert. “More on American Negro Slave Revolts,” Science and Society, 2 (1938), pp. 386-91. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp.(58-63). 838. Aptheker, Herbert. “Negro Slave Revolts in the United States, 1526-1860,” in idem, Essays in the History of the American Negro (New York: International Publishers, 1945, 1964), pp. 1-70. 839. Aptheker, Herbert. “The Quakers and Negro Slavery,” Journal of Negro History, 25, 3 (1940), pp. 331-62. Reprinted in Aptheker, Toward Negro Freedom, pp. 10-35. 840. Aptheker, Herbert. “Slave Resistance in the United States,” in Nathan I. Huggins, Martin Kilson, and Daniel M. Fox, eds., Key Issues in the Afro-American Experience (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1971), vol. 1, pp. 161-73. 841. Aptheker, Herbert. “We Will Be Free”: Advertisements for Runaways and the Reality of American Slavery. Santa Clara: Santa Clara University Ethnic Studies Program, Occasional Paper no. 1, 1984. 842. Armellin, Bruno, ed. La condizione dello schiavo: autobiografie degli schiavi neri negli Stati Uniti. Torino: Einaudi, 1975. 843. Armstrong, Orland Kay. Old Massa’s People: The Old Slaves Tell Their Story. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1931. 844. Arnavon, Cyrille, and Pierre Lepinasse. “L’esclavage en Amérique du Nord et aux États-Unis,” in Martin and Ricard, eds., Une institution particulière, pp. 127-35. 845. Asch, Michael I. “Social Context and the Musical Analysis of Slavery Drum Dance Songs,” Ethnomusicology, 19, 2 (1975), pp. 245-57. 846. Aston, Lee J. “The Wright Interpretation of Southern U.S. Economic Development: A Review Essay of Old South, New South by Gavin Wright,” Agricultural History, 61, 4 (1987), pp. 52-67. 847. Aufhauser, R. Keith. “Slavery and Scientific Management,” Journal of Economic History, 33, 4 (1973), pp. 811-24. 70 848. Auping, J. “The Relative Efficiency of Evangelical Non-Violence: The Influence of a Revival of Religion on the Abolition of Slavery in North America, 1740-1865” (Soc. D., Pontificia Universitas Gregoriana, Rome, 1977). 849. Austin, Allan D., ed. African Muslims in Antebellum America: A Sourcebook. New York: Garland, 1984. 850. Bailey, David T. “A Divided Prism: Two Sources of Black Testimony on Slavery,” Journal of Southern History, 46, 3 (1980), pp. 381-404. 851. Bailey, David T. Shadow on the Church: Southwestern Evangelical Religion and the Issue of Slavery, 1783-1860. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985. 852. Bakker, Jan. “Caroline Gilman and the Issue of Slavery in the Rose Magazines, 1832-1839,” Southern Studies, 24, 3 (1985), pp. 273-83. 853. Balme, Joshua Rhodes. American States, Churches and Slavery. New York: Negro Universities Press, 1969. 854. Barbour, Hugh S., ed. Slavery and Theology: Writings of Seven Quaker Reformers, 18001870. Dublin, Ind.: Prinit Press, 1985. 855. Barnett, Evelyn Brooks. “The Changing Family Portrait,” Radical History Review, 4, 2-3 (1977), pp. 91-104. 856. Bartour, Ron. “American Views on ‘Biblical Slavery’: 1835-1865, A Comparative Study,” Slavery and Abolition, 4, 1 (1983), pp. 41-55. 857. Bartlett, Irving H., and Richard L. Schoenwald. “The Psychodynamics of Slavery (review essay: Thorpe, The Old South: A Psychohistory),” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 4, 4 (1974), pp. 627-33. 858. Bassett, John S. The Southern Plantation Overseer, as Revealed in His Letters. Northampton: Smith College, 1925. 859. Bassett, Victor H. “Plantation Medicine,” Journal of the Medical Association of Georgia, 29, 3 (1940), pp. 112-22. 860. Bateman, Fred, and Thomas Weiss. A Deplorable Scarcity: The Failure of Industrialization in the Slave Economy. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1981. 861. Bauer, Raymond A., and Alice H. Bauer. “Day to Day Resistance to Slavery,” Journal of Negro History, 27, 4 (1942), pp. 388-419. Reprinted in Herbert Gutman and Gregory Kealey, eds., Many Pasts: Readings in American Social History (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 319-41; also in Bracey, Meier, and Rudwick, eds., American Slavery, pp. 37-60; also in Rose, ed., Americans from Africa, vol. 2, pp. 5-29; also in Haynes, ed., Blacks in White America Before 1865, pp. 235-59; also in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp.(84-115). Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-19. 862. Bean, Richard N., and Robert P. Thomas. “The Adoption of Slave Labor in British America,” in Gemery and Hogendorn, eds., Uncommon Market, pp. 377-98. 863. Bean, William G. “An Aspect of Know Nothingism - The Immigrant and Slavery,” South Atlantic Quarterly, 23, 4 (1929), pp. 319-34. 71 864. Belin, H. E. “A Southern View of Slavery,” American Journal of Sociology, 13, 4 (1908), pp. 513-22. 865. Berlin, Ira. “The Revolution in Black Life,” in Alfred F. Young, ed., The American Revolution: Explorations in the History of American Radicalism (Dekalb, Ill.: Northern Illinois University Press, 1976), pp. 349-82. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery, Revolutionary America, and the New Nation, pp. (134). 866. Berlin, Ira. “Time, Space, and the Evolution of Afro-American Society on British Mainland North America,” American Historical Review, 85, 1 (1980), pp. 44-78. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (2-36); also in Hoffer, ed., Africans Become Afro-Americans, pp. 396-430; also in Winthrop D. Jordan and Sheila Skemp, eds., Race and Family in the Colonial South (Jackson and London: University Press of Mississippi, 1987), pp. 131-46. 867. Berlin, Ira, Francine C. Cary, Steven F. Miller, and Leslie S. Rowland. “Family and Freedom: Black Families in the American Civil War,” History Today, 37, 1 (1987), pp. 8-15. 868. Berlin, Ira, and Ronald Hoffman, eds. Slavery and Freedom in the Age of the American Revolution. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1983. 869. Berlin, Ira, Joseph P. Reidy, and Leslie S. Rowland, eds. Freedom: A Documentary History of Emancipation, 1861-1867. Series II: The Black Military Experience. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982. 870. Berns, Walter. “The Constitution and the Migration of Slaves,” Yale Law Journal, 78, 2 (1968), pp. 198-228. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 34-64. 871. Berquist, Harold E., Jr. “Henry Middleton and the Arbitrament of the AngloAmerican Slave Controversy by Tsar Alexander I,” South Carolina Historical Magazine, 82, 1 (1981), pp. 20-31. 872. Berry, Mary Frances. “The Slave Community: A Review of Reviews,” in Gilmore, ed., Revisiting Blassingame’s The Slave Community, pp. 3-16. 873. Berry, Mary Frances, and John W. Blassingame. “African Slavery and the Roots of Contemporary Black Culture,” Massachusetts Review, 18, 3 (1977), pp. 501-16. 874. Berwanger, Eugene H. The Frontier Against Slavery: Western Anti-Negro Prejudice and the Slavery Expansion Controversy. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1967. 875. Berwanger, Eugene H. “Negrophobia in Northern Proslavery and Anti-slavery Thought,” Phylon, 33, 3 (1972), pp. 266-75. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (2-11). 876. Berwanger, Eugene H., ed. As They Saw Slavery. Minneapolis: Winston Press, 1973. 877. Bestor, Arthur. “State Sovereignty and Slavery: A Reinterpretation of Proslavery Constitutional Doctrine, 1846-1860,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, 54, 2 (1961), pp. 117-80. 72 Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (13-76). 878. Billings, Warren M. “The Legal Treatment of Slavery in Early America (review essay: Higginbotham, In the Matter of Color),” Plantation Society in the Americas, 1, 2 (1979), pp. 265-71. 879. Billingsley, Andrew, and Marilyn Cynthia Greene. “The Other Side of Slavery,” in Robert L. Clarke, ed., Afro-American History: Sources for Research (Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press, 1981), pp. 123-38. (National Archives Conferences, no. 12) 880. Birnbaum, Gudrun. “Studies on Slaves and Slaveholders since Time on the Cross” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 881. Blackett, R. J. M. Building an Antislavery Wall: Black Americans in the Atlantic Abolitionist Movement. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1983. 882. Blassingame, John W. (Review essay: Genovese, Roll, Jordan, Roll), Journal of Social History, 9, 3 (1976), pp. 403-09. 883. Bodziock, Joseph. “The Weight of Sambo’s Woes,” Journal of American Culture, 12, 4 (1989), pp. 89-97. 884. Bogue, Allan G. “Fogel’s Journey through the Slave States (review essay: Without Consent or Contract),” Journal of Economic History, 50, 3 (1990), pp. 699-710. 885. Boles, John B. Black Southerners 1619-1869. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1983. 886. Boles, John B. “Introduction,” to idem, ed., Masters and Slaves in the House of the Lord, pp. 1-18. 887. Boles, John B. “Slaves in Biracial Protestant Churches,” in Samuel S. Hill, ed., Varieties of Southern Religious Experience (Baton Rouge: Lousiana State University Press, 1988), pp. 95-114. 888. Boles, John B., ed. Masters and Slaves in the House of the Lord: Race and Religion in the American South 1740-1870. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1988. For contents see Boles, Dew, Gallay, Hall, James, Miller, Mohr, Sparks, and Touchstone. 889. Boller, Paul F., Jr. “Washington, the Quakers, and Slavery,” Journal of Negro History, 46, 2 (1961), pp. 83-88. 890. Bolner, James. “The American Constitution and the Issue of Slavery” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 891. Bolner, James. “The Supreme Court and the Slavery Question,” in Martin and Ricard, eds., Une institution particulière, pp. 49-67. 892. Bonacich, Edna. “Abolition, the Extension of Slavery, and the Position of Free Blacks: A Study of Split Labor Markets in the United States, 1830-1863,” American Journal of Sociology, 81, 3 (1975), pp. 601-28. 73 893. Boney, F. Nash. “Assessments of Some Recent Works in Black History: The Continuing Slavery Debate: An Essay Review (of Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross),” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 58, 4 (1974), pp. 409-13. 894. Boney, F. Nash. “The South’s Peculiar Institution,” Louisiana Studies, 12, 4 (1973), pp. 565-77. 895. Bontemps, Arna W. Great Slave Narratives. Boston: Beacon Press, 1969. 896. Boritt, G. S. “The Voyage to the Colony of Linconia: The Sixteenth President, Black Colonization, and the Defense Mechanism of Avoidance,” Historian, 37, 4 (1975), pp. 619-32. 897. Boskin, Joseph. Sambo: The Rise and Demise of an American Jester. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986. 898. Botkin, Benjamin A. “The Slave as His Own Interpreter,” Quarterly Journal of Current Acquisitions (Library of Congress), 2, 1 (1944), pp. 37-63. 899. Botkin, Benjamin A., ed. Lay My Burden Down: A Folk History of Slavery. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1945. 900. Bottomore, T., ed. “Slavery,” in A Dictionary of Marxist Thought (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983), pp. 440-41. 901. Bracey, John H., Jr., August Meier, and Elliott Rudwick, eds. American Slavery: The Question of Resistance. Belmont, Cal.: Wadsworth, 1971. For contents see Aptheker, Bauer and Bauer, Elkins, Fredrickson and Lasch, Genovese, Mullin, Patterson, Phillips, Stampp, Starobin, Thorpe, Wade, and Wish 902. Bradley, Patricia. “Slavery in Colonial Newspapers: The Somerset Case,” Journalism History, 12 (1985), pp. 2-7. 903. Bradley, Patricia. “Slavery in Colonial Newspapers on the Eve of the Revolution, 1770-1776” (PhD diss., University of Texas - Austin, 1988). 904. Brand, Norman E. “Power in the Blood: The Polemics of the Fugitive Slave Narrative” (PhD diss., Arizona State University, 1972). 905. Breeden, James O., ed. Advice Among Masters: The Ideal in Slave Management in the Old South. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1980. 906. Brown, Bertram Wyatt. “Slavery, Sectionalism and Secession,” in Jack P. Greene, ed., Encyclopedia of American Political History (New York: Scribner’s, 1984), vol. 3, pp. 116086. 907. Brown, Gillian. “Getting in the Kitchen with Dinah: Domestic Politics in Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” American Quarterly, 36, 4 (1984), pp. 503-23. 908. Brown, Minnie Miller. “Black Women in American Agriculture,” Agricultural History, 50, 1 (1976), pp. 202-12. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women’s History, vol. 1, pp. 83-93. 909. Brown, Richard D., ed. Slavery in American Society. New York: Heath, 1969. (Problems in American Civilization Series) 74 For contents see Davis, Elkins, Genovese (2), Harris, Hoetink, Jordan, Klein, Stampp, and Tannenbaum. 910. Brown, Richard H. “The Missouri Crisis, Slavery, and the Politics of Jacksonianism,” South Atlantic Quarterly, 65, 1 (1966), pp. 55-72. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (77-94). 911. Bruce, Dickson D., Jr. “Racial Fear and the Proslavery Argument: A Rhetorical Approach,” Mississippi Quarterly, 33, 4 (1980), pp. 461-78. 912. Bryce-Laporte, Roy Simon. “The American Slave Plantation and our Heritage of Communal Deprivation,” American Behavioral Scientist, 12, 4 (1969), pp. 2-8. Reprinted in Norman R. Yetman and C. Hoy Steele, eds., Majority and Minority: The Dynamics of Race and Ethnic Relations (Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1975), pp. 184-9l. 913. Bryce-Laporte, Roy Simon. “The Conceptualization of the American Slave Plantation as a Total Institution” (PhD diss., University of California, Los Angeles, 1968). 914. Bryce-Laporte, Roy Simon. “The Slave Plantation: Background to Present Conditions of Urban Blacks,” in Peter Orleans and William Russell Ellis, Jr., eds., Race, Change, and Urban Society (Urban Affairs Annual Review), 5 (1971), pp. 257-84. *Reprinted in Edgar G. Epps, ed., Race Relations: Current Perspectives (Cambridge, Mass.: Winthrop Publishers, 1973). Excerpted in Robert K. Yin, ed., Race, Creed, Color, or National Origin (Washington, D.C.: F. E. Peacock, 1973), pp. 148-54. 915. Bullock, Henry Allen. “A Hidden Passage in the Slave Regime,” in Curtis and Gould, eds., Black Experience, pp. 3-32. 916. Burnham, Dorothy. “The Life of the Afro-American Woman in Slavery,” International Journal of Women’s Studies, 1, 4 (1978), pp. 363-77. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 1, pp. 197-211. 917. Calhoun, Daniel. “Call to Quarters: A Review Essay (of Genovese, Roll, Jordan, Roll),” Agricultural History, 49, 2 (1975), pp. 448-54. 918. Campbell, John. “Work, Pregnancy, and Infant Mortality among Southern Slaves,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 14, 4 (1984), pp. 793-812. 919. Campbell, Mavis C. “Notes on Time on the Cross,” Caribbean Studies, 16, 2 (1976), pp. 145-55. 920. Campbell, Penelope. Maryland in Africa: The Maryland State Colonization Society, 18311857. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1971. 921. Cantor, Milton. “The Image of the Negro in Colonial Literature.” Reprinted in Hoffer, ed., Africans Become Afro-Americans, pp. 92-117. 922. Carby, Hazal V. “Ideologies of Black Folk: The Historical Novel of Slavery,” in Deborah E. McDowell and Arnold Rampersad, eds., Slavery and the Literary Imagination (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989), pp. 125-43. 75 923. Cardell, Nicholas Scott, and Mark Myron Hopkins. “The Effect of Milk Intolerance on the Consumption of Milk by Slaves in 1860,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 8, 3 (1978), pp. 507-13. 924. Cargill, Kathleen, Tyson Gibbs, and Leslie Sue Lieberman. “Slave Diet and Evidence of Supplement to the Standard Allotment,” Florida Scientist, 43, 3 (1980), pp. 16064. 925. Carper, N. Gordon. “Slavery Re-visited: Peonage in the South,” Phylon, 37, 1 (1976), pp. 85-99. 926. Carroll, Joseph C. Slave Insurrections in the United States, 1800-1865. Boston: Chapman and Grimes, 1938. 927. Carstensen, Fred V., and S. E. Goodman. “Trouble on the Auction Block: Interregional Slave Sales and the Reliability of a Linear Equation,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 8, 2 (1977), pp. 315-18. 928. Carter, Ralph D. “Slavery and the Climate of Opinion,” in Gilmore, ed., Revisiting Blassingame’s The Slave Community, pp. 70-95. 929. Cassity, Michael J. “Slaves, Families, and ‘Living Space’: A Note on Evidence and Historical Context,” Southern Studies, 17, 2 (1978), pp. 209-15. 930. Catterall, Helen T., ed. Judicial Cases Concerning American Slavery and the Negro. 5 vols. Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Institute of Washington, 1926-27. (Papers of the Division of Historical Research, no. 374) Reprinted, with additions (J. J. Hayden). New York: Negro Universities Press, 1968. 931. Caulfield, Mina Davis. “Slavery and the Origins of Black Culture: Elkins Revisited,” in Rose, ed., Americans from Africa, vol. 1, pp. 171-93. 932. Chambers, William. American Slavery and Colour. New York: Negro Universities Press, 1968. 933. Channing, Steven A. “Slavery,” in David Roller and Robert W. Twyman, eds., The Encyclopedia of Southern History (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1979), pp. 1110-13. 934. Chapman, Abraham, comp. Steal Away: Stories of the Runaway Slaves. New York: Praeger, 1971. 935. Cheek, William F., ed. Black Resistance Before the Civil War. Beverly Hills, Cal.: Glencoe Press, 1970. 936. Clark, Elizabeth B. “Matrimonial Bonds: Slavery and Divorce in NineteenthCentury America,” Law and History Review, 8, 1 (1990), pp. 25-54. 937. Clarke, James J., Jr. “The Fugitive Slave as Humorist,” Studies in American Humor, 1, 2 (1974), pp. 73-78. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Fugitive Slaves, pp. (67-72). 938. Clinton, Catherine. “Caught in the Web of the Big House: Women and Slavery,” in Walter J. Fraser, R. Frank Saunders, Jr., Jon L. Wakelyn, eds., The Web of Southern Social 76 Relations: Women, Family, and Education (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1985), pp. 1934. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (9-24); also in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 1, pp. 225-40. 939. Clinton, Catherine. “The Plantation Mistress: Another Side of Southern Slavery, 1780-1835” (PhD diss., Princeton University, 1980). 940. Cocke, Margaret Ritchie Harrison. “Sir Joseph de Courcy Laffan’s Views on Slavery,” William and Mary Quarterly, 2nd ser., 19, 1 (1939), pp. 42-48. 941. Cody, Cheryll Ann. “Marriage,” in John David Smith and Randall M. Miller, eds., Dictionary of Afro-American Slavery (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1988), pp. 435-38. 942. Cohen, Sylvester, Jr. “The Militant Proslavery Argument in Perspective,” Umoja: A Scholarly Journal of Black Studies, n.s. 1, 3 (1977), pp. 59-69. 943. Cohen, William. “Thomas Jefferson and the Problem of Slavery,” Journal of American History, 56, 3 (1969), pp. 503-26. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery, Revolutionary America, and the New Nation, pp. (3558). 944. Cole, Johnetta. “Militant Black Women in Early U.S. History,” The Black Scholar, 9, 7 (1978), pp. 38-44. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 1, pp. 261-67. 945. Collins, Bruce. “American Slavery and its Consequences,” Historical Journal, 22, 4 (1979), pp. 997-1015. 946. “A Colloquium on Herbert Gutman’s The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 17501925,” Social Science History, 3, 3-4 (1979), pp. 45-85. 947. Colp, Ralph, Jr. “Charles Darwin: Slavery and the American Civil War,” Harvard Library Bulletin, 26, 4 (1978), pp. 471-89. 948. Conway, Alan. “Slavery in the United States,” Historical News (Christchurch, New Zealand), 35 (1977), pp. l-6. 949. Cooper, William J., Jr. Liberty and Slavery: Southern Politics to 1860. New York: Knopf, 1983. 950. Cooper, William J., Jr. The South and the Politics of Slavery. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1978. 951. Cottrol, Robert J. “Comparative Slave Studies: Urban Slavery as a Model, Travelers’ Accounts as a Source - Bibliographical Essay,” Journal of Black Studies, 8, 1 (1977), pp. 3-12. 952. Cottrol, Robert J., and Raymond T. Diamond. (Review essay: Higginbotham, In the Matter of Color),” Tulane Law Review, 56, 3 (1982), pp. 1107-23. 953. Countryman, Edward. “Review Essay: A World the Slaves Made (Joyner, Down by the Riverside),” Slavery and Abolition, 6, 2 (1985), pp. 160-67. 77 954. Cover, Robert M. Justice Accused: Antislavery and the Judicial Process. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1975. 955. Cowdrey, Albert E. “Slave into Soldier,” History Today, 20, 10 (1970), pp. 704-15. 956. Cox, Lawanda. “From Great White Men to Blacks Emerging from Bondage, with Innovations in Documentary Editing (review essay: Berlin, Reidy, and Rowland, eds., Freedom),” Reviews in American History, 12, 1 (1984), pp. 31-39. 957. Crane, Verner W. “Benjamin Franklin on Slavery and American Liberties,” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 62, 1 (1938), pp. 1-11. 958. Crawford, Martin. “The Times and American Slavery in the 1850s,” Slavery and Abolition, 3, 3 (1982), pp. 228-42. 959. Crawford, Stephen Cooban. “Quantified Memory: A Study of the WPA and Fisk University Slave Narrative Collections” (PhD diss., University of Chicago, 1980). 960. Cripps, Thomas. “Chronicling the Folklore of Racism (review essay: Van Deburg, Slavery and Race in American Popular Culture),” Reviews in American History, 12, 4 (1984), pp. 498-501. 961. Crowe, Charles. “Black Culture and White Power: Notes on the History of Historical Perceptions (review essay: Stuckey, Slave Culture),” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 73, 2 (1989), pp. 250-77. 962. Crowe, Charles. “Historians and ‘Benign Neglect’: Conservative Trends in Southern History and Black Studies,” Reviews in American History, 2, 2 (1974), pp. 163-72. 963. Crowe, Charles. “Slavery, Ideology, and ‘Cliometrics’,” Technology and Culture, 17, 2 (1976), pp. 271-85. 964. Crowe, Charles. “Time on the Cross: The Historical Monograph as a Pop Event,” History Teacher, 9, 4 (1976), pp. 588-630. 965. Curtis, Anna L. Stories of the Underground Railroad. New York: Island Workshop Press Co-operative, 1941. 966. Curtis, James C., and Lewis L. Gould, eds. The Black Experience in America: Selected Essays. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1970. For contents see Bullock, and Willis. 967. Daniel, Pete. “The Metamorphosis of Slavery, 1865-1900,” Journal of American History, 66, 1 (1979), pp. 88-99. 968. Daniel, W. Harrison. “Southern Presbyterians and the Negro in the Early National Period,” Journal of Negro History, 58, 3 (1973), pp. 291-312. 969. Daniels, Winthrop More. “The Slave Plantation in Retrospect,” Atlantic Monthly, 107 (1911), pp. 363-69. 970. *David, Paul A. “Child Care in the Slave Quarters: Critical Notes on Some Uses of Demography in Time on the Cross” (Research memorandum, Stanford Center for Research in Economic Growth, 1975, unpublished). 78 971. David, Paul A. “The Relative Efficiency of Slave Agriculture: Comment,” American Economic Review, 69, 1 (1979), pp. 213-18. 972. David, Paul A. “Slavery: The Progressive Institution?” Journal of Economic History, 34, 3 (1974), pp. 739-83. Reprinted in David, et al., Reckoning with Slavery, pp. 165-230. 973. David, Paul A. “Time on the Cross: Two Views, Capitalist Masters, Bourgeois Slaves,” Journal of Interdisiplinary History, 5, 3 (1975), pp. 445-57. 974. David, Paul A., Herbert G. Gutman, Richard Sutch, Peter Temin, and Gavin Wright, with an introduction by Kenneth Stampp. Reckoning with Slavery: A Critical Study in the Quantitative History of American Negro Slavery. New York: Oxford University Press, 1976. For contents see David (2), David and Temin, Gutman and Sutch (3), Stampp, Sutch, and Wright. 975. David, Paul A., et al. “Time on the Cross and the Burden of Quantitative History,” in idem, Reckoning with Slavery, pp. 339-57. 976. David, Paul A., and Peter Temin. “Capitalist Masters, Bourgeois Slaves,” in David, et al., Reckoning with Slavery, pp. 33-54. 977. Davies, Charles Huntington. From Slavery to Freedom. Aurora, Ill.: Press of C. B. Phillips (published by the author), 1900. 978. Davis, David Brion. “American Slavery and the American Revolution,” in Berlin and Hoffman, eds., Slavery and Freedom in the Age of the American Revolution, pp. 262-80. Reprinted in idem, From Homicide to Slavery: Studies in American Culture (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986), pp. 290-305. 979. Davis, David Brion. “Slavery and the American Mind,” in Owens, ed., Perspectives and Irony, pp. 51-69. 980. Davis, David Brion. “Slavery and the Meaning of America,” in Patrick Gerster and Nicholas Cords, eds., Myth and Southern History (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1989), vol. 1, pp. 31-40. (Reprinted from The Problem of Slavery in Western Culture.) 981. Davis, David Brion. “Slavery and the Post-World War II Historians,” Daedalus, 103, 2 (1974), pp. 1-16. Reprinted in Sidney W. Mintz, ed., Slavery, Colonialism, and Racism (New York: Norton, 1974), pp. 1-16; also in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (139-54); also in idem, From Homicide to Slavery: Studies in American Culture (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986), pp. 187-206. 982. Davis, Mary Kemp. “The Historical Slave Revolt and the Literary Imagination” (PhD diss., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1984). 983. Davis, Thomas J. “Slave Testimony: A Review Essay and a Bibliography,” AfroAmericans in New York Life and History, 3, 1 (1979), pp. 73-85. 984. “Un débat historiographique: l’esclavage aux Etats-Unis,” Bulletin de la Société de l’histoire moderne, 18 (1977), pp. 8-17. 79 985. Degler, Carl N. “Discussions of New Books: Freedom After Slavery (review essay: Litwack, Been in the Storm So Long),” Virginia Quarterly Review, 56, 2 (1980), pp. 344-56. 986. Degler, Carl N. “The Irony of American Negro Slavery,” in Owens, ed., Perspectives and Irony, pp. 3-35. 987. Detweiler, Philip F. “Congressional Debate on Slavery and the Declaration of Independence, 1819-1821,” American Historical Review, 53, 3 (1958), pp. 598-616. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 92-110. 988. Dew, Charles B. “The Sambo and Nat Turner in Everyslave: A Review of Roll, Jordan, Roll,” Civil War History, 21, 3 (1975), pp. 261-68. 989. Dew, Charles B. “The Slavery Experience,” in John B. Boles and Evelyn Thomas Nolen, eds., Interpreting Southern History: Historiographical Essays in Honor of Sanford W. Higginbotham (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1987), pp. 120-61. 990. Dickson, Bruce D., Jr. “The ‘John and Old Master Stories’ and the World of Slavery: A Study in Folktales and History,” Phylon, 35, 4 (1974), pp. 418-29. 991. Dillon, Merton L. Slavery Attacked: Southern Slaves and their Allies, 1619-1865. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1990. 992. Diner, Hasia R. “Black Women in Families: From Field to Factory,” Reviews in American History, 13, 4 (1985), pp. 551-56. 993. Dinkins, James. “Negroes as Slaves,” Southern Historical Society Papers, 35 (1907), pp. 60-68. 994. Donald, David. “The Proslavery Argument Reconsidered,” Journal of Southern History, 37, 1 (1971), pp. 3-19. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (95-110). 995. Dorman, James H. “Time on the Cross While Jordan Rolled: America’s Peculiar Institution and its Recent Historians,” Revue de Louisiane/Louisiana Review, 4, 1 (1975), pp. 59-77. 996. Dorman, James H., and Robert R. Jones. The Afro-American Experience: A Cultural History Through Emancipation. New York: Wiley, 1974. 997. Douglas, Robert L. “Myth or Truth: A White and Black View of Slavery (review essay: Blassingame, Slave Community, and work of Elkins),” Journal of Black Studies, 19, 3 (1989), pp. 343-60. 998. Dover, Cedric. “The Manual Arts,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 221-25. 999. Dubois, W. E. B. “The African Artisan,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 171-74. 1000. Dubois, W. E. B. “The Ante-Bellum Negro Artisan,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 175-82. 80 1001. Dudley, David Lewis. “‘The Trouble I’ve Seen’: Visions and Revisions of Bondage, Flight, and Freedom in Black American Autobiography” (PhD diss., Louisiana State University, 1988). 1002. Duff, John B., and Larry A. Greene, eds. Slavery, Its Origin and Legacy. New York: Crowell, 1975. 1003. Dunn, Richard S. “Servants and Slaves: The Recruitment and Employment of Labor,” in Jack P. Greene and J. R. Pole, eds., Colonial British America: Essays in the New History of the Early Modern Era (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1984), pp. 15794. 1004. Dusinberre, William. “The Aftermath of American Slavery (review essay: Litwack, Been in the Storm So Long),” History, 68 (no. 222) (1983), pp. 64-79. 1005. Early, Gerald Lyn. “‘A Servant of Servants Shall He Be . . . ‘: Paternalism and Millennialism in American Slavery Literature, 1850-59” (PhD diss., Cornell University, 1982). 1006. Eblen, Jack E. “New Estimates of the Vital Rates of the United States Black Population During the Nineteenth Century,” Demography, 11, 2 (1974), pp. 301-20. Reprinted in Maris A. Vinovskis, ed., Studies in American Historical Demography (New York: Academic Press, 1979), pp. 339-57. 1007. “The Econometrics of Slavery: A Symposium (multiple review essays: Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross by Bertram Wyatt-Brown, pp. 457-65; William N. Parker, pp. 466-74; Stephen DeCanio, pp. 474-87),” Reviews in American History, 2, 4 (1974), pp. 457-87. 1008. Egnal, Marc. “American Slavery: The Newer Exegesis (review essay: Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross, and Genovese, Roll, Jordan, Roll),” Canadian Review of American Studies, 6, 1 (1975), pp. 110-17. 1009. Ehrlich, Walter. They Have No Rights: Dred Scott’s Struggle for Freedom. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1979. 1010. Elbert, Sarah. “Good Times on the Cross: A Marxian Review,” Review of Radical Political Economics, 7, 3 (1975), pp. 55-66. 1011. Elkins, Stanley M. “Slavery,” in Haynes, ed., Blacks in White America Before 1865, pp. 203-13. (From Slavery: A Problem in American Institutional and Intellectual Life) 1012. Elkins, Stanley M. “Slavery and Negro Personality,” in Rose, ed., Americans from Africa, vol. 1, pp. 131-54. 1013. Elkins, Stanley M. “The Slavery Debate,” Commentary, 60, 6 (1975), pp. 40-54. 1014. Elkins, Stanley M. “The Social Consequences of Slavery,” in Huggins, Kilson, and Fox, eds., Key Issues in the Afro-American Experience, vol. 1, pp. 138-53. 1015. Ellis, R. J. “Mark Twain and the Ideology of Southern Slaves,” in Archer, ed., Slavery and Other Forms of Unfree Labour, pp. 157-75. 1016. Ellison, Mary. “Resistance to Oppression: Black Women’s Response to Slavery in the United States,” Slavery and Abolition, 4, 1 (1983), pp. 56-63. 81 1017. Emmer, P[ieter] C. “Proletariaat of kleine bourgeoisie? Nieuwe literatuur over de slavernij in de V.S.,” Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis, 91, 2 (1978), pp. 263-69. 1018. Engelder, Conrad James. “The Churches and Slavery: A Study of the Attitudes Toward Slavery of the Major Protestant Denominations” (PhD diss., University of Michigan, 1964). 1019. Engerman, Stanley L. “The Heights of Slaves in the United States,” Local Population Studies, 16 (1976), pp. 45-49. 1020. Engerman, Stanley L. “Introduction (to the Special Issue on Colonial Slavery),” Southern Studies, 16, 4 (1977), pp. 347-54. See listings under Southern Studies. 1021. Engerman, Stanley L., and Robert W. Fogel. “The Relative Efficiency of Slavery: A Comparison of Northern and Southern Agriculture in 1860,” Explorations in Economic History, 8, 3 (1971), pp. 353-67. 1022. Ensslen, Klaus. “Slave Narratives as Documentary and Fictional Texts on Slavery in the United States” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 1023. Eppes, Susan Bradford. The Negro of the Old South: A Bit of Period History. Chicago: Joseph G. Branch, 1925. 1024. *Epstein, Dena J. “Slave Music in the United States Before 1860,” Music Library Association Notes, 20 (1965), pp. 195-212, 377-90. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (57-88). 1025. Ernst, Daniel R. “Legal Positivism, Abolitionist Litigation, and the New Jersey Slave Case of 1845,” Law and History Review, 4, 2 (1986), pp. 337-65. 1026. Escott, Paul D. “Jefferson Davis and Slavery in the Territories,” Journal of Mississippi History, 39, 2 (1977), pp. 97-116. 1027. Escott, Paul D. “Reflections on Slavery Remembered,” North Carolina Historical Review, 57, 2 (1980), pp. 178-85. 1028. Escott, Paul D. Slavery Remembered: A Record of Twentieth-Century Slave Narratives. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1979. 1029. Evans, Robert, Jr. “The Economics of American Negro Slavery,” in National Bureau of Economic Research, Aspects of Labor Economics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1962), pp. 185-256. Reprinted in Aitken, ed., Did Slavery Pay?, pp. 197-209. 1030. Evitts, William J. Captive Bodies, Free Spirits: The Story of Southern Slavery. New York: J. Messner, 1985. 1031. Fabre, Michel. “Contrabands All: Neither Slaves nor Freemen” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of ErlangenNürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 1032. Fabre, Michel. Esclaves et planteurs dans le sud américain au XIXe siècle. Paris: Gallimard, 1978. 82 1033. Fairbanks, Charles H. “The Plantation Archaeology of the Southeastern Coast,” Historical Archaeology, 18, 1 (1984), pp. 1-14. 1034. Fairbanks, Charles H. “Spaniards, Planters, Ships and Slaves: Historical Archaeology in Florida and Georgia,” Archaeology, 29, 3 (1976), pp. 164-72. 1035. Farley, Ena L. “The Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 Revisited,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 3, 2 (1979), pp. 110-15. 1036. Farley, Reynolds. “The Demographic Rates and Social Institutions of the Nineteenth-Century Negro Population: A Stable Population Analysis,” Demography, 2 (1965), pp. 386-98. 1037. Faust, Drew Gilpin. “A Southern Stewardship: The Intellectual and the Proslavery Argument,” American Quarterly, 31, 1 (1979), pp. 63-80. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (129-46). 1038. Fede, Andrew. “Legitimized Violent Slave Abuse in the American South, 16191865: A Case Study of Law and Social Change in Six Southern States,” American Journal of Legal History, 29, 2 (1985), pp. 93-150. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (31-88). 1039. Fede, Andrew. “Toward a Solution of the Slave Law Dilemma: A Critique of Tushnet’s ‘The American Law of Slavery’,” Law and History Review, 2, 2 (1984), pp. 301-20. 1040. Fehrenbacher, Don E. “Slavery, the Framers, and the Living Constitution,” in Robert A. Goldwin and Art Kaufman, eds., Slavery and Its Consequences: The Constitution, Equality, and Race (Washington: American Enterprise Institute, 1988), pp. 1-22. (AEI Studies, 469) 1041. Fehrenbacher, Don E. Slavery, Law, and Politics: The Dred Scott Case in Historical Perspective. New York: Oxford University Press, 1981. 1042. Feldstein, Stanley. Once a Slave: The Slave’s View of Slavery. New York: W. Morrow, 1971. 1043. Feldstein, Stanley. “The Slave’s View of Slavery” (PhD diss., New York University, 1969). 1044. Ferguson, Leland G. “Looking for the ‘Afro’ in Colono-Indian Pottery,” The Conference on Historic Site Archaeology Papers, 12 (1978), pp. 68-86. Reprinted in R. L. Schuyler, ed., Archaeological Perspectives on Ethnicity (Farmingdale, N.Y.: Baywood Publishing Company, 1980), pp. 14-28. 1045. *Ferguson, Leland G. “Seeing the World the Slaves Made” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Symposium on Language and Culture, University of South Carolina, Columbia, 1986). 1046. Fields, Barbara Jeanne. “Slavery, Race and Ideology in the United States of America,” New Left Review, 181 (1990), pp. 95-118. 1047. Filler, Louis. Slavery in the United States of America. New York: Van Nostrand, 1972. 83 1048. Fink, Leon, “Introduction (to Symposium on Gutman, Black Family),” Radical History Review, 4, 2-3 (1977), pp. 76-78. 1049. Finkelman, Paul. “Chief Justice Hornblower and the Unconstitutionality of Federal Fugitive Slave Law” (Paper presented to Organization of American Historians, Chicago, 1992). 1050. Finkelman, Paul. An Imperfect Union: Slavery, Federalism, and Comity. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1981. 1051. Finkelman, Paul. The Law of Freedom and Bondage: A Casebook. New York: Oceana Publications, 1986. 1052. Finkelman, Paul. “The Peculiar Laws of the Peculiar Institution (review essay: Tushnet, American Law of Slavery),” Reviews in American History, 10, 3 (1982), pp. 358-65. 1053. Finkelman, Paul. “Slavery and the Constitutional Convention: Making a Convenant with Death,” in Richard Beeman, Stephen Botein, and Edward C. Carter II, eds., Beyond Confederation: Origins of the Constitution and American National Identity (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1987), pp. 188-225. Reprinted in idem, ed., Slavery, Revolutionary America, and the New Nation, pp. (60-97). 1054. Finkelman, Paul. “Slavery and the Northwest Ordinance: A Study in Ambiguity,” Journal of the Early Republic, 6, 4 (1986), pp. 343-70. Reprinted in idem, ed., Slavery, Revolutionary America, and the New Nation, pp. (99-126). 1055. Finkelman, Paul. Slavery in the Courtroom: An Annotated Bibliography of American Cases. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, 1985. 1056. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Antislavery. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 14 of Articles on American Slavery) 1057. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Colonial Southern Slavery. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 3 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Billings, Brewer, Green, Degler, Handlin and Handlin, Johnson, Jordan (2), Kulikoff (2), Menard (2), E. Morgan (2), P. Morgan, Mullin, Quarles, Sirmans, Usner, Vaughan, Wax, and Wiecek. 1058. Finkelman, Paul, ed. The Culture and Community of Slavery. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 8 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Cimbala, Cody, Cohen, Epstein, Faust, Genovese, Gorn, Harper (2), Inscoe, Johnson, Joyner, Levine, Miller, Otto, Starobin, Stuckey, Woodson, and Wyatt-Brown. 1059. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization and Slavery. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 10 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Berlin and Gutman, Conrad, et al., Dew (2), Earle, Engerman, Fenoaltea, Genovese (2), Goldin, Hughes, Lewis, Miller, Morgan, O’Brien, Olsen, Phillips, Radford, Savitt, Schafer, Starobin, Sutch, and Wright. 84 1060. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Free Blacks in a Slave Society. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 17 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Berlin, Fitchett, Franklin (3), Foner, Jackson, Kotlikoff and Rupert, Mills, Russell, Schwarz, and Schweninger (2). 1061. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Fugitive Slaves. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 6 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Alilunas, Blackett (2), Clark, Eggert, Finkelman (2), Gara (3), Goodheart, Leslie, Levy, Murray, Prince, Siebert, Silverman, Thornbrough, Turner, Wilson, and Yanuck. 1062. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Law, the Constitution, and Slavery. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 11 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Boles, Campbell, Fede, Finkelman, Flanigan, Genovese, Hindus, Howington, Kay and Cary, R. Morris, T. Morris, Nash (2), Reid, Schafer (2), Schwarz, Tushnet, Watson, and Wiecek (2). 1063. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 15 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Childs, Cody, Duffy, Eblen, Fisher, Genovese, Lieberman and Reitz, Haller, Joyner, Kiple and Kiple (2), Savitt (2), Steckel, and Wall. 1064. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 12 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Berwanger, Bestor, Brown, Donald, Egerton, Faust, Fredrickson, Gara, Garson, Genovese, Greenberg, Johnson, Jones, McPherson, Ramsdell, Schmidt and Wilhelm, Sellers, Jr., Tise, Toplin, and Wyatt-Brown. 1065. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways Within the Slave South. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 13 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Addington, Aptheker (2), Bauer and Bauer, Crow, Fredrickson and Lasch, Genovese, Gross and Bender, Hickey, Johnson, Lichtenstein, Moran and Terry, Oakes, Shore, Stampp, Wade, and Wish (2). 1066. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Religion and Slavery. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 16 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Anesko, Bailey, Bradley, Bringhurst, Brooks, Ferris, Jr., Genovese, Hudson, Jackson, Jentz, Jernegan, Korn, Lythgoe, McLoughlin (2), Maddex, Mathews, Miller, Posey, Raboteau, Reinders, Shanks, Simpson, H. S. Smith, T. Smith, Stange, and Suttles. 1067. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Slavery and Historiography. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 1 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Berlin, Blassingame, Cade, Conrad and Meyer, Davis, Engerman (2), Fields, Franklin, Genovese (2), Hofstadter, Kolchin, Lynd, Patterson, Phillips (2), Potter and Stampp, Shore, Smith (2), Stampp, Wall, Wood, Woodman, Woodward, and Yetman. 85 1068. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Slavery in the North and the West. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 5 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Berwanger, Davis (2), Ernst, Fogel and Engerman, Goodfriend, Greene, Jones, Katzman, Lapp, Lythgoe, Nash, Newman, Pingeon, Reidy, Riddell, Scott, Soderlund, Turner, Twombly, Twombly and Moore, Wax, Williams-Myers, and Zilversmit (2). 1069. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Slavery, Race and The American Legal System, 1700-1872. 16 vols. New York: Garland, 1988. No. 1: Southern Slaves in Free State Courts: The Pamphlet Literature. 3 vols. No. 2: Fugitive Slaves and American Courts: The Pamphlet Literature. 4 vols. No. 3: Abolitionists in Northern Courts: The Pamphlet Literature. 1 vol. No. 4: Slave Rebels, Abolitionists, and Southern Courts: The Pamphlet Literature. 2 vols. No. 5: The African Slave Trade and American Courts: The Pamphlet Literature. 2 vols. No. 6: Free Blacks, Slaves, and Slaveowners in Civil and Criminal Courts: The Pamphlet Literature. 2 vols. No. 7: Statutes on Slavery: The Pamphlet Literature. 2 vols. 1070. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Slavery, Revolutionary America and the New Nation. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 4 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Berlin, Cohen, Finkelman (2), Freehling, Frey, Franklin (2), J. Greene, L. Greene, Higgins, Jackson, Jillson and Anderson, Kaplan, Lewis, Lynd, Maslowki, Quarles, Rose, Storing, Walker, and Wood. 1071. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Southern Slavery at the State and Local Level. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 7 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Archer and Fairbanks, Campbell, Eaton, Franklin, Halliburton, Jr., Harper, Jr., Mohr, Morgan, Morns, Munroe, Perdue, Price, Rankin, Scarborough, Strickland, Wilms, Wood, Woolfolk, and Woodson. 1072. Finkelman, Paul, ed. Women and the Family in a Slave Society. New York: Garland, 1989. (Vol. 9 of Articles on American Slavery) For contents see Burnham, Clinton (2), Diedrich, Frazier, Fogel and Engerman, Gundersen, Gutman, Johnson, Jones, Joyner, Kulikoff, Lebsock, Lewis, Malone, Savitt, Schafer, Schweninger, Taylor, White, Wiggins, and Wood. 1073. Fishel, Leslie H., Jr., and Benjamin Quarles. The Black American: A Documentary History. Glenview, Ill.: Scott, Foresman, 1976. 1074. Fitch, Nancy Elizabeth. “The Stealing of Africans to the United States and its Perpetuation of European Cultural Hegemony” (Unpublished paper, World Conference on Slavery and Society in History, Ahmadu Bello University, Kaduna, Nigeria, 26-30 March 1990). 1075. Fleissig, Heywood. “Slavery, the Supply of Agricultural Labor and the Industrialization of the South,” Journal of Economic History, 36, 3 (1976), pp. 572-97. 86 1076. Fleming, John E. “Slavery, Civil War and Reconstruction: Black Women in Microcosm,” Negro History Bulletin, 38, 6 (1975), pp. 430-33. 1077. Flusche, Michael. “Joel Chandler Harris and the Folklore of Slavery,” Journal of American Studies, 9, 3 (1975), pp. 347-63. 1078. Fogel, Robert W. “From the Marxists to the Mormons,” Times Literary Supplement, no. 3823 (13 June 1975), pp. 667-70. 1079. Fogel, Robert W[illiam]. Without Consent or Contract: The Rise and Fall of American Slavery. New York: Norton, 1989. 1080. Fogel, Robert W., and Stanley L. Engerman. “The Economics of Slavery,” in Fogel and Engerman, eds., Reinterpretation, pp. 311-41. 1081. Fogel, Robert W., and Stanley L. Engerman. “Philanthropy at Bargain Prices: Notes on the Economics of Gradual Emancipation,” Journal of Legal Studies, 3, 2 (1974), pp. 377-401. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery in the North and West, pp. (77-101). 1082. Fogel, Robert W., and Stanley L. Engerman. Time on the Cross: The Economics of American Negro Slavery. 2 vols. Boston: Little, Brown, 1974. 1083. Fogel, Robert W[illiam], and Stanley L. Engerman. Time on the Cross: The Economics of American Negro Slavery (reissue, with new afterword by Fogel). New York: Norton, 1989. 1084. Fogel, Robert W[illiam], and Stanley L. Engerman, eds. Without Consent or Contract: Technical Papers - The Rise and Fall of American Slavery. New York: Norton, 1991. 2 vols. 1085. Fogel, Robert W[illiam], Ralph A. Galantine, and Richard L. Manning, eds. (with contributions from Scott Cardell, et al.). Without Consent or Contract: The Rise and Fall of American Slavery - Evidence and Methods. New York: Norton, 1991. 1086. Fogel, Robert W., and Stanley L. Engerman, eds. The Reinterpretation of American Economic History. New York: Harper and Row, 1971. 1087. Fohlen, Claude. “L’esclavage aux Etats-Unis: divergences et convergences,” Revue historique, 257, 2 (1977), pp. 345-60. 1088. Fohlen, Claude. Les noirs aux Etats-Unis. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1972. 1089. Foley, William E. “Slave Freedom Suits Before Dred Scott: The Case of Marie Jean Scypion’s Descendants,” Missouri Historical Review, 79, 1 (1984), pp. 1-23. 1090. Foner, Eric. “Blacks and the US Constitution,” New Left Review, 183 (1990), pp. 63-74. 1091. Foner, Eric. Nothing But Freedom: Emancipation and Its Legacy. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1983. 1092. Foner, Eric. “Redefining the Past (review essay: Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross),” Labor History, 16, 1 (1975), pp. 127-38. 1093. Foner, Eric. “Symposium on Roll, Jordan, Roll: Introductory Note,” Radical History Review, 3, 4 (1976), pp. 26-28. 87 1094. Foner, Philip S. “Alexander von Humboldt on Slavery in America,” Science and Society, 47, 3 (1983), pp. 330-42. 1095. Foner, Philip S. Alexander von Humboldt über die Sklaverei in den USA: eine Dokumentation mit einer Einführung und Anmerkungen. Berlin: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, 1981. 1096. Foner, Philip S. History of Black Americans: From the Compromise of 1850 to the End of the Civil War. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1983. 1097. Foner, Philip S. History of Black Americans: From the Emergence of the Cotton Kingdom to the Eve of the Compromise of 1850. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1975. 1098. Foner, Philip S. History of Black Americans From Africa to the Emergence of the Cotton Kingdom. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1975. 1099. Forbes, Jack D. “Mulattoes and People of Color in Anglo-North America: Implications for Black-Indian Relations,” Journal of Ethnic Studies, 12, 2 (1984), pp. 17-60. 1100. Fordham, Monroe. “Nineteenth-Century Black Thought in the United States: Some Influences of the Santo Domingo Revolution,” Journal of Black Studies, 6, 2 (1975), pp. 115-26. 1101. Forness, Norman O. “The Master, the Slave, and the Patent Laws: A Vignette of the 1850s,” Prologue, 12, 1 (1980), pp. 23-27. 1102. Foster, Frances S. “Slave Narratives: Text and Social Context” (PhD diss., University of California, San Diego, 1976). 1103. Foster, Frances S. “Ultimate Victims: Black Women in Slave Narratives,” Journal of American Culture, 1, 4 (1978), pp. 845-54. 1104. Foster, Frances S. Witnessing Slavery: The Development of Ante-bellum Slave Narratives. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1979. 1105. Foster, Gaines M. “Guilt over Slavery: A Historiographical Analysis,” Journal of Southern History, 56, 4 (1990), pp. 665-94. 1106. “Four Essays on Abolition and Slavery,” special issue of Conservative Historians’ Forum (ed. Robert J. Loewenberg), 6 (1982). 1107. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. “Poor Richard at Work in the Cotton Fields: A Critique of the Psychological and Ideological Presuppositions of Time on the Cross,” Review of Radical Political Economics, 7, 3 (1975), pp. 67-83. Revised as “Poor Richard at Work in the Cotton Fields; The Psychological and Ideological Presuppositions of Time on the Cross and Other Studies of Slavery,” in FoxGenovese and Genovese, Fruits of Merchant Capital, pp. 90-135. 1108. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. “Strategies and Forms of Resistance: Focus on Slave Women in the United States,” in Okihiro, ed., In Resistance, pp. 143-65. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 2, pp. 409-31. 88 1109. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. “To Write My Self: The Autobiographies of AfroAmerican Women,” in Shari Benstock, ed., Feminist Issues in Literary Scholarship (Bloomington: Indiana University Press), pp. 161-80. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women’s History, vol. 1, pp. 155-74. 1110. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. “To Write the Wrongs of Slavery (review essay: Schomburg Library of Nineteenth-Century Black Women Writers),” Gettysburg Review (winter 1989), pp. 63-76. 1111. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth, and Eugene D. Genovese. “The Cultural History of Southern Slave Society: Reflections on the Work of Lewis P. Simpson,” in J. Gerald Kennedy and Daniel Mark Fogel, eds., American Letters and the Historical Consciousness: Essays in Honor of Lewis P. Simpson (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1987), pp. 1541. 1112. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth, and Eugene D. Genovese. “The Divine Sanction of Social Order: The Religious Foundations of the Southern Slaveholders’ World View,” Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 55, 2 (1987), pp. 211-33. 1113. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth, and Eugene D. Genovese. The Mind of the Master Class: The Life and Thought of Southern Slaveholders. Forthcoming. 1114. Franklin, John Hope. From Slavery to Freedom: A History of American Negroes. New York: Knopf, 1947. 1115. Franklin, John Hope. “Slavery and the Martial South,” Journal of Negro History, 37, 1 (1952), pp. 36-53. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (232-49). Also BobbsMerrill Reprint no. H-265. 1116. Frazier, E. Franklin. The Negro Family in the United States. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1939. 1117. Frazier, E. Franklin. “The Negro Slave Family,” Journal of Negro History, 15, 1 (1930), pp. 198-259. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (42-103). Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-95. 1118. Frederick, David C. “John Quincy Adams, Slavery, and the Disappearance of the Right of Petition,” Law and History Review, 9, 1 (1991), pp. 113-55. 1119. Fredrickson, George M. “The Challenge of Marxism: The Genoveses on Slavery and Merchant Capital.” Reprinted in idem, The Arrogance of Race: Historical Perspectives on Slavery, Racism, and Social Inequality (Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1988), pp. 125-33. 1120. Fredrickson, George M. “The Gutman Report (review essay: Gutman, Black Family),” New York Review of Books, 23, 15 (30 Sept. 1976), pp. 18-27. Reprinted as “On Herbert G. Gutman’s ‘The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1750-1925’,” in Weinstein, Gatell, and Sarasohn, eds., American Negro Slavery (3rd ed.), pp. 273-86. 89 1121. Fredrickson, George M. “The Historiography of Slavery: Stanley Elkins to Herbert Gutman.” Reprinted in idem, The Arrogance of Race: Historical Perspectives on Slavery, Racism, and Social Inequality (Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1988), pp. 112-24. 1122. Fredrickson, George M. “Slavery and Race: The Southern Dilemma,” in Weinstein, Gatell, and Sarasohn, eds., American Negro Slavery (3rd ed.), pp. 34-58. (Reprinted from idem, The Black Image in the White Mind [New York: Harper and Row, 1971], pp. 4370.) 1123. Fredrickson, George M. “Social Origins of American Racism.” Reprinted in idem, The Arrogance of Race: Historical Perspectives on Slavery, Racism, and Social Inequality (Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1988), pp. 189-205. Translated as “Le développement du racisme américain: essai d’interprétation sociale” in Mintz, ed., Esclave = facteur de production, pp. 53-67. 1124. Fredrickson, George M. “White Images of Black Slaves in the Southern United States,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 368-75. Reprinted in idem, The Arrogance of Race: Historical Perspectives on Slavery, Racism, and Social Inequality (Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1988), pp. 206-15. 1125. Fredrickson, George M., and Christopher Lasch. “Resistance to Slavery,” Civil War History, 13, 4 (1967), pp. 315-29. Reprinted in Lane, ed., Debate over Slavery, pp. 223-44; also in Bracey, Meier, and Rudwick, eds., American Slavery, pp. 179-82; also in Weinstein and Gatell, eds., American Negro Slavery (2nd ed.), pp. 118-33; also in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp.(141-55). 1126. Freehling, William W. “The Founding Fathers and Slavery,” American Historical Review, 77, 1 (1972), pp. 81-93. Reprinted in Weinstein and Gatell, eds., American Negro Slavery (2nd ed.), pp. 207-23; also in Weinstein, Gatell, and Sarasohn, eds., American Negro Slavery (3rd ed.), pp. 3-19; also in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 219-31; also in Finkelman, ed., Slavery, Revolutionary America, and the New Nation, pp. (127-39). 1127. Freidel, Frank. “Francis Lieber, Charles Sumner, and Slavery,” Journal of Southern History, 9, 1 (1943), pp. 75-93. 1128. Frey, Sylvia R. Water from the Rock: Black Resistance in a Revolutionary Age. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1991. 1129. Fry, Gladys-Marie. “The Preservation of Oral Stories in Black Culture,” in Miller, ed., Afro-American Slaves, pp. 95-98. (Reprinted from Night Riders in Black Folk History.) 1130. Fuller, John D. P. “Slavery Propaganda During the Mexican War,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 38, 4 (1935), pp. 235-45. 1131. Furet, F., and Robert W. Fogel. “An Interview on the Historiographic and Political Implications of Time on the Cross” (mimeographed, Department of Economics, University of Rochester, 1974). 90 1132. Furman, Marva Janett. “The Slave Narrative: Prototype of the Early AfroAmerican Novel” (PhD diss., Florida State University, 1979). 1133. Gaines, Francis Pendleton. The Southern Plantation: A Study in the Development and the Accuracy of a Tradition. New York: Columbia University Press, 1925. 1134. Galenson, David W. “Labor Market Behavior in Colonial America: Servitude, Slavery, and Free Labor,” in idem, ed., Markets in History: Economic Studies of the Past (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1989), pp. 52-96. 1135. Galenson, David W. “White Servitude and the Growth of Black Slavery in Colonial America,” Journal of Economic History, 41, 1 (1981), pp. 39-49. With commentary by Lorena S. Walsh. 1136. Galenson, David W. White Servitude in Colonial America: An Economic Analysis. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1981. 1137. Gallay, Alan. “Planters and Slaves in the Great Awakening,” in Boles, ed., Masters and Slaves in the House of the Lord, pp. 19-36. 1138. Gallerano, Nicola. “Schiavitù e famiglia nera America: un dibattito sulla Radical History Review,” Movimento operaio e socialista, 1, 4 (1978), pp. 426-37. (Cf. Radical History Review for contents.) 1139. Gallman, Robert E. “Slavery and Southern Economic Growth,” Southern Economic Journal, 45, 4 (1979), pp. 1007-22. 1140. Gallman, Robert E., and Ralph V. Anderson. “Slaves as Fixed Capital: Slave Labor and Southern Economic Development,” Journal of American History, 64, 1 (1977), pp. 24-46. 1141. Gara, Larry. “Friends and the Underground Railroad,” Quaker History, 51, 1 (1962), pp. 3-19. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Fugitive Slaves, pp. (161-77). 1142. Gara, Larry. “The Fugitive Slave Law: A Double Paradox,” Civil War History, 10, 3 (1964), pp. 229-40. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 232-43; also in Finkelman, ed., Fugitive Slaves, pp. (179-90). 1143. Gara, Larry. The Liberty Line: The Legend of the Underground Railroad. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1961. 1144. Gara, Larry. “The Professional Fugitive in the Abolition Movement,” Wisconsin Magazine of History, 48, 3 (1965), pp. 196-204. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Fugitive Slaves, pp. (192-200). 1145. Garner, Reuben. “Responses of Colonial Inspectors to Slavery and the Slave Trade, 1815-1849,” Negro History Bulletin, 35, 7 (1972), pp. 155-58. 1146. Gatewood, Willard B., Jr. “Frederick Douglass and the Building of a ‘Wall of Anti-Slavery Fire,’ 1845-1846: An Essay Review,” Florida Historical Quarterly, 59, 3 (1981), pp. 340-44. 91 1147. Genovese, Eugene D. “American Slaves and Their History,” New York Review of Books, 15, 10 (3 Dec. 1970), pp. 34-43. Reprinted in Lane, ed., Debate over Slavery, pp. 293-321; also in Weinstein and Gatell, eds., American Negro Slavery (2nd ed.), pp. 183-204; also in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (104-12); also in Miller, ed., Afro-American Slaves, pp. 41-61. 1148. Genovese, Eugene D. “Capitalist and Pseudo-Capitalist Features of the Slave Economy,” in Brown, ed., Slavery in American Society, pp. 93-98. (Reprinted from idem, Political Economy of Slavery, pp. 19-23, 28-36.) y 1149. Genovese, Eugene D. “The Debate over Time on the Cross: A Critique of Bourgeois Criticism,” in Fox-Genovese and Genovese, Fruits of Merchant Capital, pp. 13671. 1150. Genovese, Eugene D. “Getting to Know the Slaves (review essay: Yetman, ed., Life Under the ‘Peculiar Institution’, Myers, Children of Pride, Rawick, The American Slave: A Composite Autobiography),” New York Review of Books, 19, 4 (21 Sept. 1972), pp. 16-19. 1151. Genovese, Eugene D. In Red and Black: Marxian Explorations in Southern and AfroAmerican History. New York: Pantheon, 1971. New ed. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1984. 1152. Genovese, Eugene D. “In the Name of Humanity and the Cause of Reform,” in Review of Radical Political Economics, 7, 3 (1975), pp. 84-99. (Excerpt from Roll, Jordan, Roll.) 1153. Genovese, Eugene D. “The Legacy of Slavery and the Roots of Black Nationalism,” Studies on the Left, 6, 6 (1966), pp. 2-26. Reprinted in Rose, ed., Americans from Africa, vol. 2, pp. 31-51. Revised in Genovese, In Red and Black, pp. 129-57. 1154. Genovese, Eugene D. “Marxian Interpretations of the Slave South,” in Barton J. Bernstein, ed., Towards a New Past: Dissenting Essays in American History (New York: Pantheon Books, 1968), pp. 90-125. 1155. Genovese, Eugene D. “The Negro Laborer in Africa and the Slave South,” Phylon, 21, 4 (1960), pp. 343-50. Reprinted in Rose, ed., Americans from Africa, vol. 1, pp. 71-82; also in Genovese, Political Economy of Slavery, pp. 70-84. 1156. Genovese, Eugene D. “Race and Class in Southern History: An Appraisal of the Work of Ulrich Bonnell Phillips,” Agricultural History, 41, 2 (1967), pp. 345-59, and commentaries by David M. Potter, “The Work of U. B. Phillips: A Comment,” Kenneth M. Stampp, “Reconsidering U. B. Phillips: A Comment,” and Stanley Elkins, “Class and Race: A Comment,” pp. 359-71. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (269-95). 1157. Genovese, Eugene D. “A Reply to Criticism,” Radical History Review, 4, 1 (1977), pp. 94-110. 92 1158. Genovese, Eugene D. (Review essay: Gutman, Black Family in Slavery and Freedom),” incorporated (from Times Literary Supplement, 76 [no. 3911] [25 Feb. 1977], pp. 198-99) in “The Debate over Time on the Cross: A Critique of Bourgeois Criticism,” in FoxGenovese and Genovese, Fruits of Merchant Capital, pp. 136-71. 1159. Genovese, Eugene D. Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World the Slaves Made. New York: Pantheon, 1974. 1160. Genovese, Eugene D. “The Slave States of North America,” in Cohen and Greene, eds., Neither Slave nor Free, pp. 258-77. 1161. Genovese, Eugene D. “Slavery in the Legal History of the South and the Nation (review essay: Finkelman, An Imperfect Union; Hindus, Prison and Plantation, and Tushnet, American Law of Slavery),” Texas Law Review, 59, 5 (1981), pp. 969-98. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (155-84). 1162. Genovese, Eugene D. “Solidarity and Servitude (review essay: Gutman, Black Family in Slavery and Freedom),” Times Literary Supplement, 76 (no. 3911) (25 Feb. 1977), pp. 198-99. 1163. Genovese, Eugene D. “Toward a Psychology of Slavery: An Assessment of the Contribution of The Slave Community,” in Gilmore, ed., Revisiting Blassingame’s The Slave Community, pp. 27-42. 1164. Genovese, Eugene D., ed. The Slave Economy of the Old South: Selected Essays in Economic and Social History. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1968. (Essays by U. B. Phillips) 1165. George, James Zachariah. The Political History of Slavery in the United States. New York: Neale Publishing Company, 1915. 1166. Gilmore, Al-Tony, ed. Revisiting Blassingame’s The Slave Community: The Scholars Respond. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1978. For contents see Anderson, Berry, Blassingame (2), Carter, Clarke, Engerman, Genovese, Owens, Rawick, and Thorpe. 1167. Goldin, Claudia D. “American Slavery: De Jure and De Facto,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 10, 1 (1979), pp. 129-36. 1168. Goldin, Claudia D. “A Model to Explain the Relative Decline of Urban Slavery: Empirical Results,” in Engerman and Genovese, eds., Race and Slavery, pp. 427-50. (With comment by Harold D. Woodman, pp. 451-54.) 1169. Goldin, Claudia D. Urban Slavery in the American South, 1820-1860: A Quantitative History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1976. 1170. Goldin, Claudia D. “Urbanization and Slavery: The Issue of Compatibility,” in Leo F. Schnore, ed., The New Urban History: Quantitative Explorations by American Historians (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1975), pp. 231-46. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (243-58). 93 1171. Goodson, Martia G[raham]. “An Introductory Essay and Subject Index to Selected Interviews from the Slave Narrative Collecction” (PhD diss., Union Graduate School, 1977). 1172. Goodson, Martia G. “Medical-Botanical Contributions of African Slave Women to American Medicine,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 11, 4 (1987), pp. 198-203. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 2, pp. 473-84. 1173. Goodson, Martia G. “The Significance of ‘Race-of-Interviewer’ in the Collection and Analysis of the Twentieth Century Ex-slave Narratives: Considering the Sources,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 9, 3 (1985), pp. 126-34. 1174. Goodson, Martia G[raham]. “The Slave Narrative Collection: A Tool for Reconstructing Afro-American Women’s History,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 3, 2 (1979), pp. 116-22. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 2, pp. 485-97. 1175. Gordon, Asa H. “The Struggle of the Negro Slaves for Physical Freedom,” Journal of Negro History, 13, 1 (1926), pp. 22-35. 1176. Gorn, Elliott J. “Black Magic: Folk Beliefs of the Slave Community,” in Ronald L. Numbers and Todd L. Savitt, eds., Science and Medicine in the Old South (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989), pp. 293-326. 1177. Gorn, Elliott J. “Black Spirits: The Ghostlore of Afro-American Slaves,” American Quarterly, 36, 4 (1984), pp. 549-65. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (113-29). 1178. Graves, Philip E., Robert L. Sexton, and Richard K. Vedder. “Slavery, Amenities, and Factor Price Equalization: A Note on Migration and Freedom,” Explorations in Economic History, 20, 2 (1983), pp. 156-62. 1179. Green, Mitchell A. “Impact of Slavery on the Black Family: Social, Political, and Economic,” Journal of Afro-American Studies, 3, 3-4 (1975), pp. 343-56. 1180. Greenberg, Kenneth S. Masters and Statesmen: The Political Culture of American Slavery. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985. 1181. Greenberg, Kenneth S. “Why Masters are Slaves (review essay: Faust, James Henry Hammond and the Old South),” Reviews in American History, 11, 3 (1983), pp. 386-89. 1182. Greenberg, Michael. “The New Economic History and the Understanding of Slavery: A Methodological Critique,” Dialectical Anthropology, 2 (1977), pp. 131-41. Translated as “La nouvelle histoire économique et l’analyse de l’esclavage,” in Mintz, ed., Esclave = facteur de production, pp. 184-200. 1183. Greenberg, Michael. “Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World the Slaves Made, by Eugene Genovese: A Review Essay,” Radical History Review, 3, 4 (1976), pp. 29-40. 1184. Gregory, Chester W. “Black Women in Pre-Federal America,” in Mabel E. Deutrich and Virginia C. Purdy, eds. Clio was a Woman: Studies in the History of American 94 Women (Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press, 1980), pp. 53-70. (National Archives Conferences, vol. 16) Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 2, pp. 499-516. 1185. Grittner, Frederick K. “White Slavery: Myth, Ideology, and American Law” (PhD diss., University of Minnesota, 1986). 1186. Grob, Gerald N., and George Athan (sic) Billias. “American Slaves,” in Patrick Gerster and Nicholas Cords, eds., Myth and Southern History (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1989), vol. 1, pp. 91-106. (Reprinted from idem, Interpretions of American History: Patterns and Perspectives [5th ed.] [New York: The Free Press, 1987], vol. 1.) 1187. Gudeman, Stephen. “An Anthropologist’s View of Herbert Gutman’s The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1750-1925,” Social Science History, 3, 3-4 (1979), pp. 56-65. 1188. Gujer, B. “Free Trade and Slavery: Calhoun’s Defense of Southern Interests Against British Interference, 1811-1848” (Diss., Universität Zürich, 1971). 1189. Gunderson, Gerald. “Slavery,” in Glenn Porter, ed., Encyclopedia of American Economic History (New York: Scribner’s, 1980), vol. 2, pp. 552-61. 1190. Gutman, Herbert G. The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1750-1925. New York: Pantheon, 1976. 1191. Gutman, Herbert G. “The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom: A Revised Perspective,” in Gene D. Lewis, ed., New Historical Perspectives: Essays on the Black Experience in Antebellum America (Cincinnati: Friends of Harriet Beecher Stowe House and Citizen’s Committee on Youth, 1984), pp. 7-36. Reprinted in Miller, ed., Afro-American Slaves, pp. 77-92; also in idem (ed. Ira Berlin), Power and Culture: Essays on the American Working Class (New York: Pantheon, 1987), pp. 357-79. 1192. Gutman, Herbert G. “Enslaved Afro-Americans and the ‘Protestant’ Work Ethic.” (From David, et al., Reckoning with Slavery). (Reprinted from Slavery and the Numbers Game, pp. 14-41.) Reprinted in idem (ed. Ira Berlin), Power and Culture: Essays on the American Working Class (New York: Pantheon, 1987), pp. 357-79. 1193. Gutman, Herbert G. “Marital and Sexual Norms among Slave Women.” (From The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, pp. 62-83, 557-61.) Reprinted in Nancy F. Cott and Elizabeth H. Pleck, eds., A Heritage of Her Own: Toward a New Social History of American Women (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1979), pp. 298-310; also in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 2, pp. 545-57. 1194. *Gutman, Herbert G. “Slave Culture and Slave Family and Kin Network: The Importance of Time,” South Atlantic Urban Studies, 2 (1978), pp. 73-88. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (151-66). 1195. Gutman, Herbert G. “Slave Family and its Legacies,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 6, 1 (1979), pp. 183-99. Commentaries by Barry Higman (pp. 200-03), Stanley L. Engerman (pp. 204-12). 95 1196. Gutman, Herbert G. “The World Two Cliometricians Made (review essay: Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross),” Journal of Negro History, 60, 1 (1975), pp. 53-227. Republished as Slavery and the Numbers Game: A Critique of Time on the Cross (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1975). 1197. Gutman, Herbert G., and Richard Sutch. “Sambo Makes Good, or Were Slaves Imbued with the Protestant Work Ethic,” in David, et al., Reckoning with Slavery, pp. 55-93. 1198. Gutman, Herbert G., and Richard Sutch. “The Slave Family: Protected Agent of Capitalist Masters or Victim of the Slave Trade?” in David, et al., Reckoning with Slavery, pp. 94-133. 1199. Gutman, Herbert G., and Richard Sutch. “Victorians All? The Sexual Mores and Conduct of Slaves and their Masters,” in David, et al., Reckoning with Slavery, pp. 134-62. 1200. Gyrisco, Geoffrey M., and Bert Salwen. “Archaeology of Black American Culture: An Annotated Bibliography,” in R. L. Schuyler, ed., Archaeological Perspectives on Ethnicity (Farmingdale, N.Y.: Baywood Publishing Company, 1980), pp. 76-85. 1201. Hahn, Steven. (Review essay: Oakes, The Ruling Race: A History of American Slaveholders), Reviews in American History, 11, 2 (1983), pp. 219-25. 1202. Hall, Kermit L., ed. The Law of American Slavery. New York: Garland, 1987. For contents see Alpert, Berns, Cushing, Detweiler, Elkins and McKitrick, Finkelman (2), Flanigan, Freehling, Gara, Genovese and Fox-Genovese, Greene, Horowitz, Howington, Moore, Morris (R. B.), Morris (T. D.), Nash, “American Slavery and the Conflict of Laws”, O’Brien, Russell, Stephenson and Stephenson, Jr., Treacy, Tushnet, Wiecek (2), and Yanuck. 1203. Hall, Mark. “The Proslavery Thought of J. D. B. De Bow: A Practical Man’s Guide to Economics,” Southern Studies, 21, 1 (1982), pp. 97-104. 1204. Halliburton, R., Jr. “Free Black Owners of Slaves: A Reappraisal of the (Carter G.) Woodson Thesis,” South Carolina Historical Magazine, 76, 3 (1975), pp. 129-42. 1205. Handlin, Oscar. “The Capacity of Quantitative History,” Perspectives in American History, 9 (1975), pp. 7-26. With a reply: Robert W. Fogel, “Reply to Oscar Handlin,” pp. 29-32. 1206. Hardy, James D., Jr. “The Banality of Slavery,” Southern Studies, 25, 2 (1986), pp. 187-95. 1207. Harris, Robert L., Jr. “The Heart of the Slave: Attitudes Toward Bondage in America,” Black Lives, 2, 4 (1972), pp. 28-38. 1208. Harrold, Stanley. “Cassius M. Clay on Slavery and Race: A Reinterpretation,” Slavery and Abolition, 9, 1 (1988), pp. 42-56. 1209. Hartfield, Marianne. “New Thoughts on the Proslavery Natural Law Theory: The Importance of History and the Study of Ancient Slavery,” Southern Studies, 22, 3 (1983), pp. 244-59. 1210. Harvard Law Review. “Higginbotham: In the Matter of Color (review essay),” Plantation Society in the Americas, 1, 2 (1979), pp. 262-64. 96 1211. Haskell, Thomas L. “The True and Tragical History of ‘Time on the Cross’,” New York Review of Books, 22, 15 (2 Oct. 1975), pp. 33-39. 1212. Haskell, Thomas L. “Were Slaves More Efficient? Some Doubts about ‘Time on the Cross’,” New York Review of Books, 21, 14 (19 Sept. 1975), pp. 38-42. 1213. Haynes, Robert V., ed. Blacks in White America Before 1865: Issues and Interpretations. New York: D. McKay, 1972. For contents see Bauer, Blassingame (2), Degler, Elkins, Fage, Genovese, Jordan, McManus, Stuckey, Thalwell, Turner, and Twombley. 1214. Hedin, Raymond. “The American Slave Narrative: The Justification of the Picaro,” American Literature, 53, 4 (1982), pp. 630-45. 1215. Hedin, Raymond. “Muffled Voices: The American Slave Narrative,” Clio, 10, 2 (1981), pp. 129-42. 1216. Hickey, Donald R. “America’s Response to the Slave Revolt in Haiti, 1791-1806,” Journal of the Early Republic, 2, 4 (1982), pp. 361-79. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp.(211-29). 1217. Higginbotham, A. Leon, Jr. In the Matter of Color: Race and the American Legal Process: The Colonial Period. New York: Oxford University Press, 1978. 1218. Higginbotham, Don, and William S. Price, Jr. “Was it Murder for a White Man to Kill a Slave? Chief Justice Martin Howard Condemns the Peculiar Institution in North Carolina,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 36, 4 (1979), pp. 593-601. 1219. Hilgendorf, Mark Steven. “Revisionist Interpretations of Slavery in Senior High School American History Textbooks” (PhD diss., Duke University, 1982). 1220. Hill, James D. “Some Economic Aspects of Slavery, 1850-1860,” South Atlantic Quarterly, 26, 2 (1927), pp. 161-77. 1221. Hindus, Michael S. Prison and Plantation: Crime, Justice, and Authority in Massachusetts and South Carolina, 1767-1878. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1980. 1222. Hine, Darlene Clark. “An Angle of Vision: Black Women and the United States Constitution, 1787-1987,” OAH Magazine of History, 3, 1 (special supplement, 1988), pp. 713. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women’s History, vol. 1, pp. 193-203. 1223. Hine, Darlene C[lark]. “Female Slave Resistance: The Economics of Sex,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 3, 2 (1979), pp. 123-27. Reprinted in idem, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 2, pp. 657-66; also in Filomena Chioma Steady, ed., The Black Woman Cross-Culturally (Rochester, Vermont: Schenkman Books, 1981), pp. 289-99. 1224. Hine, Darlene Clark. “Lifting the Veil, Shattering the Silence: Black Women’s History in Slavery and Freedom,” in idem, ed., The State of Afro-American History: Past, Present, and Future (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1986), pp. 223-49. Reprinted in idem, ed., Black Women’s History, vol. 1, pp. 235-61. 97 1225. Hine, Darlene Clark, ed. Black Women in American History from Colonial Times through the Nineteenth Century. 4 vols. Brooklyn: Carlson Publishing Co., 1990. For contents see: Vol. 1 - Akers, Axelson, Berlin/Miller/Rowland, Bogin, Burnham, Clinton, Cody, Cole, Cunningham, Davis; Vol. 2 - Farnham, Foster, Fox-Genovese, Fry, Goodson (2), Gregory, Gundersen, Gutman, Gwin, Hine, Johnson; Vol. 3 - Jones, Kulikoff, Matthews, Mills, Newman, Obitko, Parkhurst; Vol. 4 - Schafer, Sealander, Shammas, Soderlund, Terborg-Penn, Thompson, and White. 1226. Hine, Darlene Clark, ed. Black Women’s History: Theory and Practice. 2 vols. Brooklyn: Carlson Publishing Co., 1990. For contents see: Vol. 1 - Biola, Brown, Fox-Genovese, Hine, Katz (2), Ladner; Vol. 2 - Marable and Strong. 1227. Hine, Darlene Clark, and Kate Wittenstein. “Female Slave Resistance: The Economics of Sex,” in Filomina Chioma Steady, ed., The Black Woman Cross-Culturally (Cambridge, Mass.: Schenkman, 1981), pp. 289-99. 1228. Hoffer, Peter Charles, ed. Africans Become Afro-Americans: Selected Articles on Slavery in the American Colonies. New York: Garland, 1988. For contents see Berlin, Cantor, Curtin, Degler, Elkins and McKitrick, Engerman, Handlin and Handlin, Jordan, Klein, Kulikoff, Menard (2), Morgan, Quarles, Tully, Wax, Wiecek, and Wood. 1229. Hoffert, Sylvia. “This ‘One Great Evil’,” American History Illustrated, 12 (1977), pp. 37-41. 1230. Hoffmann, Elliot W. “Black Hessians: American Blacks as German Soldiers,” Negro History Bulletin, 44, 4 (1981), pp. 81-82, 91. 1231. Hollander, A. N. J. den. “Eenige economische aspecten van de negerslavernij in de Vereenigde Staten van Noord America,” Tijdschrift voor Geschedenis, 58, 2 (1943), pp. 10020. 1232. Hollander, Barnett. Slavery in America. New York: Barnes and Noble, 1963. 1233. Holt, Thomas C. “On the Cross: The Role of Quantitative Methods in the Reconstruction of the African-American Experience,” Journal of Negro History, 61, 2 (1976), pp. 158-72. 1234. Hood, R. E. “From a Headstart to a Deadstart: The Historical Basis for Black Indifference Toward the Episcopal Church 1800-1860,” Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church, 51, 3 (1982), pp. 269-96. 1235. Hopkins, James F. “Slavery in the Hemp Industry,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 145-56. 1236. Horowitz, Harold W. “Choice-of-Law Decisions Involving Slavery: ‘Interest Analysis’ in the Early Nineteenth Century,” UCLA Law Review, 17 (1969-70), pp. 587-601. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 295-309. 1237. Horris, Allan. “Did You Know There Were Indentured Africans Too?” New Vision, 1, 1 (1974), pp. 16-20. 98 1238. Horsman, Reginald. “The Black Experience in America (review essay: Abzug and Maizlish, eds., New Perspectives on Race and Slavery in America, Piersen, Black Yankees, and Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl),” Journal of American Ethnic History, 10, 1-2 (1991), pp. 94-98. 1239. Howson, Jean E. “Social Relations and Material Culture: A Critique of the Archaeology of Plantation Slavery,” Historical Archaeology, 24, 4 (1990), pp. 78-91. 1240. Hudson, Gossie Harold. “Black Americans vs. Citizenship: The Dred Scott Decision,” Negro History Bulletin, 46, 1 (1983), pp. 26-28. 1241. Hudson, Winthrop S. “The American Context as an Area for Research in Black Church Studies,” Church History, 52, 2 (1983), pp. 157-71. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (175-89). 1242. Huffman, Wallace E. “Black-White Human Capital Differences: Impact on Agricultural Productivity in the U.S. South,” American Economic Review, 71, 1 (1981), pp. 94107. 1243. Huggins, Nathan I[rvin]. Black Odyssey: The Afro-American Ordeal in Slavery. New York: Pantheon, 1977. Republished New York: Random House, 1990. 1244. Huggins, Nathan I. “The Deforming Mirror of Truth: Slavery and the Master Narrative of American History,” Radical History Review, 49 (1991), pp. 25-48. (See also Wood, Dimock, and Smith.) 1245. Huggins, Nathan I. “Herbert Gutman and Afro-American History,” Labor History, 29, 3 (1988), pp. 323-35. 1246. Huggins, Nathan I[rvin], Martin L. Kilson, and Daniel M. Fox, eds. Key Issues in the Afro-American Experience. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1971. For contents see Elkins and Stampp. 1247. Huston, James L. “The Experiential Basis of the Northern Antislavery Impulse,” Journal of Southern History, 56, 4 (1990), pp. 609-40. 1248. Huston, James L. “The Panic of 1857, Southern Economic Thought, and the Patriarchal Defense of Slavery,” Historian, 46, 2 (1984), pp. 163-86. 1249. Ianni, Octavio. “Notes on Slavery and History” (unpublished paper presented at MSSB Conference on Time on the Cross, Rochester, New York, 1974). 1250. Innes, Stephen. “The Contagion of Liberty? (review essay: Berlin and Hoffman, eds., Slavery and Freedom),” Reviews in American History, 12, 1 (1984), pp. 40-44. 1251. Isaac, Rhys. “Idleness Ethic and the Liberty of Anglo-Americans (review essay: Morgan, American Slavery-American Freedom),” Reviews in American History, 4, 1 (1976), pp. 4752. 1252. Issel, William. “History, Social Science, and Ideology: Elkins and Blassingame on Ante-Bellum American Slavery,” History Teacher, 9, 1 (1975), pp. 56-72. 1253. Jackson, Bruce, ed. The Negro and His Folklore in Nineteenth Century Periodicals. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1967. 99 1254. Jacobs, Donald M., ed. Index to The American Slave. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1981. (To Rawick, The American Slave) 1255. Jacobs, Donald M. “Twentieth-Century Slave Narratives as Source Materials: Slave Labor as Agricultural Labor,” Agricultural History, 57, 2 (1983), pp. 223-27. 1256. Jaffa, Harry V. “Wills’s Inventing America, and the Pathology of Ideological Scholarship,” Conservative Historians’ Forum, 6 (1982), pp. 2-5. 1257. Jenkins, William Sumner. Pro-Slavery Thought in the Old South. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1935. 1258. Jennings, Lawrence C. “French Views on Slavery and Abolitionism in the United States, 1830-1848,” Slavery and Abolition, 4, 1 (1983), pp. 19-40. 1259. Jernegan, Marcus W. “Slavery and the Beginning of Industrialization in the American Colonies,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 3-20. 1260. Jernegan, Marcus W. “Slavery and Conversion in the American Colonies,” American Historical Review, 21, 3 (1916), pp. 504-27. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (316-39). 1261. Johnson, Edgar Hutchinson III. “George Bancroft, Slavery, and the American Union” (PhD diss., Auburn University, 1983). 1262. Johnson, Michael P. “Smothered Slave Infants: Were Slave Mothers at Fault?” Journal of Southern History, 47, 4 (1981), pp. 493-520. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (167-94); also in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 2, pp. 709-36. 1263. Johnston, James H. Race Relations in Virginia and Miscegenation in the South, 17761860. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1970. Foreword by Winthrop Jordan. 1264. Johnston, James H[ugo]. “A New Interpretation of the Domestic Slave System,” Journal of Negro History, 18, 1 (1933), pp. 39-45. 1265. Jones, Jacqueline. Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow: Black Women, Work, and the Family from Slavery to the Present. New York: Basic Books, 1985. 1266. Jones, Jacqueline. “‘My Mother was Much of a Woman’: Black Women, Work, and the Family Under Slavery,” Feminist Studies, 8, 2 (1982), pp. 235-69. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (195-229); Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 3, pp. 737-71. 1267. Jones, Rhett S. “In the Absence of Ideology: Blacks in Colonial America and the Modern Black Experience,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 12, 1 (1988), pp. 30-39. 1268. Jones, Steven L. “The African-American Tradition in Vernacular Architecture,” in Singleton, ed., Archaeology of Slavery, pp. 195-213. 1269. Jordan, Weymouth T. “Plantation Medicine in the Old South,” Alabama Review, 3, 2 (1950), pp. 83-107. 100 1270. Jordan, Winthrop D. “The Enslavement of Negroes in America to 1700,” reprinted in Stanley N. Katz and John M. Murrin, eds., Colonial America: Essays in Social Development (3rd ed.) (New York: Knopf, 1983), pp. 250-89. (From White Over Black.) 1271. Jordan, Winthrop D. “The Limits of Liberty (review essay: MacLeod, Slavery, Race, and the American Revolution),” Times Literary Supplement, no. 3851 (2 Jan. 1976), p. 3. 1272. Jordan, Winthrop D. “Modern Tensions and the Origins of American Slavery,” Journal of Southern History, 28, 1 (1962), pp. 18-30. Reprinted in Weinstein and Gatell, eds., American Negro Slavery (1st ed.), pp. 13-24 (with omissions); also in Noel, ed., Origins of American Slavery and Racism, pp. 81-94; also in Rose, ed., Americans from Africa, vol. 1, pp. 103-15; also in Haynes, ed., Blacks in White America Before 1865, pp. 104-16; also in Finkelman, ed., Colonial Southern Slavery, pp. (11224). Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-159. 1273. Jordan, Winthrop D. “Unthinking Decision: Enslavement of Negroes in America to 1700,” in Brown, ed., Slavery in American Society, pp. 1-22. (Reprinted from White Over Black, pp. 44-98.) 1274. Jordan, Winthrop D. White Over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 15501812. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1968. 1275. *Kahn, C. “A Linear Programming Solution to the Slave Diet,” in R. W. Fogel and S. L. Engerman, eds., Without Consent or Contract: Technical Papers on Slavery (New York: Norton, 1992). 1276. Karcher, Carolyn L. Shadow Over the Promised Land: Slavery, Race, and Violence in Melville’s America. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1980. 1277. Karsky, Barbara. “Les libéraux français et l’émancipation des esclaves aux EtatsUnis, 1852-1870,” Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine, 21, 4 (1974), pp. 575-90. 1278. Kates, Don B., Jr. “Abolition, Deportation, Integration: Attitudes Toward Slavery in the Early Republic,” Journal of Negro History, 53, 1 (1968), pp. 33-47. 1279. Kaufman, Martin. “Medicine and Slavery (Savitt): An Essay Review,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 64, 3 (1979), pp. 380-90. 1280. Keller, Frances Richardson. “The Perspective of a Black American on Slavery and the French Revolution: Anna Julia Cooper,” Proceedings of the Third Annual Meeting of the Western Society for French History (Denver, 1975) (n.p.: Western Society for French History, 1976), pp. 165-76. 1281. Keller, Ralph A. “Extraterritoriality and the Fugitive Slave Debate,” Illinois Historical Journal, 78, 2 (1985), pp. 113-28. 1282. Kendrick, Dolores. The Women of Plums: Poems in the Voices of Slave Women. New York: William Morrow, 1989. 1283. Kett, Joseph F. “The Black Family under Slavery (review essay: Gutman, Black Family in Slavery and Freedom),” History of Education Quarterly, 17, 4 (1977), pp. 455-60. 1284. Kiely, Terrence F. “The Hollow Words: An Experiment in Legal Historical Method as Applied to the Institution of Slavery,” De Paul Law Review, 25 (1976), pp. 842-94. 101 1285. Kilson, Marion D. de B. “Afro-American Social Structure, 1790-1970,” in Kilson and Rotberg, eds., African Diaspora, pp. 414-58. 1286. Kilson, Marion D. de B. “Towards Freedom: An Analysis of Slave Revolts in the United States,” Phylon, 25, 2 (1964), pp. 175-87. Reprinted in Meier and Rudwick, eds., Making of Black America, vol. 1, pp. 165-78. 1287. King, Richard H. “Marxism and the Slave South,” American Quarterly, 29, 1 (1977), pp. 117-31. Reprinted as “On Eugene D. Genovese’s ‘Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World the Slaves Made,’ and Other Works,” in Weinstein, Gatell, and Sarasohn, eds., American Negro Slavery (3rd ed.), pp. 257-72. 1288. Kiple, Kenneth F., and Virginia H. Kiple. “Black Tongue and Black Men: Pellagra and Slavery in the Antebellum South,” Journal of Southern History, 43, 3 (1977), pp. 411-28. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery, pp. (197-214). 1289. Kiple, Kenneth F., and Virginia H. Kiple. “Black Yellow Fever Immunities, Innate and Acquired, as Revealed in the American South,” Social Science History, 1, 4 (1977), pp. 419-36. 1290. Kiple, Kenneth F., and Virginia H. Kiple. “Slave Child Mortality: Some Nutritional Answers to a Perennial Puzzle,” Journal of Social History, 10, 3 (1977), pp. 284309. Reprinted in Patricia Branca, ed., The Medicine Show: Patients, Physicians, and the Perplexities of the Health Revolution in Modern Society (New York: Science History Publications, 1977), pp. 21-46; also in Finkelman, ed., Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery, pp. (216-41). 1291. Klotter, James C. “Slavery and Race: A Family Perspective,” Southern Studies, 17, 4 (1978), pp. 375-98. 1292. Kneebone, John T. “Sambo and the Slave Narratives: A Note on Sources,” Essays in History, 19 (1975), pp. 7-23. 1293. Knight, Franklin W. “The American Revolution and the Caribbean,” in Berlin and Hoffman, eds., Slavery and Freedom in the Age of the American Revolution, pp. 237-61. 1294. Kolchin, Peter. “Race, Slavery, and History (review essay: Franklin, Race and History, and Parish, Slavery, History and Historians),” Reviews in American History, 18, 4 (1990), pp. 466-72. 1295. Kolchin, Peter. “Reevaluating the Antebellum Slave Community: A Comparative Perspective,” Journal of American History, 70, 3 (1983), pp. 579-601. 1296. Kolchin, Peter.”Toward a Reinterpretation of Slavery (review essay: Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross),” Journal of Social History, 9, 1 (1975), pp. 99-113. 1297. Korn, Bertram Wallace. Jews and Negro Slavery in the Old South, 1789-1865. Elkins Park, Pa.: Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel, 1961. Also in Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society, 50, 3 (1961), pp. 151-201. 102 Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (341-91). 1298. Krüger-Kahloula, Angelike. “Honoring and Hegemony: Afro-American Grave Decoration” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 1299. Kugler, R. F. “U. B. Phillips’ Use of Sources,” Journal of Negro History, 47, 3 (1962), pp. 153-68. 1300. Kulikoff, Allan. “Uprooted Peoples: Black Migrants in the Age of the American Revolution, 1790-1820,” in Berlin and Hoffman, eds., Slavery and Freedom in the Age of the American Revolution, pp. 143-71. 1301. Kuyk, Betty M. “The African Derivation of Black Fraternal Orders in the United States,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 25, 4 (1983), pp. 559-92. 1302. Lachance, Paul F. “Use and Misuse of the Slave Community Paradigm (review essay: Boles, Black Southerners, Fraser, ed., The Southern Enigma, Foner, History of Black Americans, and Wayne, Reshaping of Plantation Society),” Canadian Review of American Studies, 17, 4 (1986), pp. 449-58. 1303. Ladner, Joyce. “Racism and Tradition: Black Womanhood in Historical Perspective,” in Filomena Chioma Steady, ed. The Black Woman Cross-Culturally (Cambridge, Mass.: Schenkman, 1981), pp. 269-88. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women’s History, vol. 1, pp. 363-82. 1304. Landes, Ruth. “Negro Slavery and Female Status,” in Les Afro-Américains (Amsterdam, 1953), pp. 265-68. (Mémoires de l’Institut Française d’Afrique Noire, no. 27) 1305. Langum, David J. “The Role of Intellect and Fortuity in Legal Change: An Incident from the Law of Slavery,” American Journal of Legal History, 28, 1 (1984), pp. 1-16. 1306. Lantz, Herman R. “Family and Kin as Revealed in the Narratives of Ex-Slaves,” Social Science Quarterly, 60, 4 (1980), pp. 667-75. 1307. Lanzinger, Klaus. “Unterschiede im Gebrauch von ‘slave’, seiner Wortfamilie und seiner Sinnverwandten in den Nord- und Südstaaten vor dem Bürgerkrieg,” Jahrbuch für Amerikastudien, 7 (1962), pp. 92-105. 1308. Laprade, William T. “Some Problems in Writing the History of American Slavery,” South Atlantic Quarterly, 10, 2 (1911), pp. 134-41. 1309. Laslett, Peter. “Household and Family on the Slave Plantations of the USA,” in idem, Family Life and Illicit Love in Earlier Generations (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977), pp. 233-60. 1310. Leaming, Hugo Prosper. “Hidden Americans: Maroons of Virginia and the Carolinas” (PhD diss., University of Illinois, Chicago Circle, 1979). 1311. Leslie, Joshua, and Sterling Stuckey. “The Death of Benito Cereno: A Reading of Herman Melville on Slavery,” Journal of Negro History, 67, 4 (1982), pp. 287-301. 1312. Levesque, George A. “Slavery in the Ideology and Politics of the Revolutionary Generation,” Canadian Review of American Studies, 18, 3 (1987), pp. 367-81. 103 1313. Levine, Lawrence W. “African Culture and U.S. Slavery,” in Joseph E. Harris, ed., Global Dimensions of the African Diaspora (Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press, 1982), pp. 127-35. Reprinted in The African Diaspora: Africans and their Descendants in the Wider World to 1800 (Written and edited by The Black Diaspora Committee of Howard University) (Lexington, Mass.: Ginn Press, 1986), pp. 173-79. 1314. Levine, Lawrence W. Black Culture and Black Consciousness: Afro-American Folk Thought from Slavery to Freedom. New York: Oxford University Press, 1977. 1315. Levine, Lawrence W. “Slave Songs and Slave Consciousness: An Exploration in Neglected Sources,” in Tamara K. Hareven, ed., Anonymous Americans: Explorations in Nineteenth-Century Social History (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1971), pp. 99-130. Reprinted in Weinstein, Gatell, and Sarasohn, eds., American Negro Slavery (3rd ed.), pp. 143-72; also in Miller, ed., Afro-American Slaves, pp. 62-76. 1316. Levy, David W. “Racial Stereotypes in Antislavery Fiction,” Phylon, 31, 3 (1970), pp. 265-79. 1317. Lewis, Ronald L. “The ‘American Dream’ and the Rationalization of Slavery,” Crisis, 83, 7 (1976), pp. 253-54. 1318. Lewit, Robert T. “Indian Missions and Antislavery Sentiment: A Conflict of Evangelical and Humanitarian Ideals,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 50, 1 (1963), pp. 39-55. 1319. Lichtenstein, Alex. “‘That Disposition to Theft, with Which they have been Branded’: Moral Economy, Slave Management, and Law,” Journal of Social History, 21, 3 (1988), pp. 413-40. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp.(255-82). 1320. Lightner, David L. “More Time on the Cross: Slavery and the Slave Trade (review essay: Fogel and Engerman, reissue of Time on the Cross, Fogel, Without Consent or Contract, Ransom, Conflict and Compromise, and Tadman, Speculators and Slaves),” Canadian Review of American Studies, 21, 3 (1990), pp. 363-68. 1321. Lindfors, Bernth. “Circus Africans,” Journal of American Culture, 6, 2 (1983), pp. 914. 1322. Lindsay, Arnett G. “Diplomatic Relations Between the United States and Great Britain Bearing on the Return of Negro Slaves, 1783-1828,” Journal of Negro History, 5, 4 (1920), pp. 391-419. 1323. Liston, R. A. Slavery in America: The Heritage of Slavery. New York: McGraw Hill, 1972. 1324. Littlefield, Daniel C. “The Historiography of Slavery in the United States: From Phillips to Genovese” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 1325. Littlefield, Daniel C. “Slaves and their Abolitionists (review essay: Dillon, Slavery Attacked),” Reviews in American History, 19, 4 (1991), pp. 485-91. 104 1326. Lloyd, Arthur Young. The Slavery Controversy, 1831-1860. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1939. 1327. Locke, Alain. “The Negro as Artist,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 205-07. 1328. Loewenberg, Robert J. “The Proslavery Roots of Socialist Thought,” Conservative Historians’ Forum, 6 (1982), pp. 14-21. 1329. Loewenberg, Robert J., ed. “Four Essays on Abolition and Slavery,” special issue of Conservative Historians’ Forum, 6 (1982). 1330. Logue, Cal M. “Transcending Coercion: The Communicative Strategies of Black Slaves on Antebellum Plantations,” Quarterly Journal of Speech, 67, 1 (1981), pp. 31-46. 1331. Lord, Donald C. “Slave Ads as Historical Evidence,” History Teacher, 5, 4 (1972), pp. 10-16. 1332. Lynd, Staughton. “On Turner, Beard and Slavery,” Journal of Negro History, 48, 4 (l963), pp. 235-50. Reprinted in Lynd, Class Conflict, Slavery, and the United States Constitution: Ten Essays (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1968), pp. 135-52; also in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (339-54). 1333. *McCants, E. C. “The Beginning of Slavery,” Southern Magazine, 2 (1939), pp. 742. 1334. McDonald, Forrest, and Grady McWhiney. “The South from Self-Sufficiency to Peonage: An Interpretation,” American Historical Review, 85, 5 (1980), pp. 1095-1118. 1335. McDonnell, Lawrence T. “Money Knows no Master: Market Relations and the American Slave Community,” in Winfred B. Moore, Jr., et al., eds., Developing Dixie: Modernization in a Traditional Society (New York: Greenwood Press, 1988), pp. 31-44. 1336. McDonnell, Lawrence T. “Slave Against Slave: Dynamics of Violence Within the American Slave Community” (Paper presented to Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, San Francisco, 1983). 1337. McDowell, Deborah E. “Negotiating between Tenses: Witnessing Slavery after Freedom - Dessa Rose,” in Deborah E. McDowell and Arnold Rampersad, eds., Slavery and the Literary Imagination (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989), pp. 144-64. 1338. McFaul, John M. “Expediency vs. Morality: Jacksonian Politics and Slavery,” Journal of American History, 62, 1 (1975), pp. 24-39. 1339. McGhee, Nancy B. “Slave Narrative in Retrospect,” Journal of Ethnic Studies, 3, 1 (1976), pp. 47-62. 1340. McGinty, Brian. “A Heap O’ Trouble (Dred Scott’s Fight for Freedom),” American History Illustrated, 16, 2 (1981), pp. 34-49. 1341. McKenzie, Edna Chappell. “Self-Hire Among Slaves, 1820-1860: Institutional Variation or Aberration?” (PhD diss., University of Pittsburgh, 1973). 105 1342. McKivigan, John R. “The Gospel Will Burst the Bonds of the Slave: The Abolitionists (sic) Bibles for Slaves Campaign,” Negro History Bulletin, 45, 3 (1982), pp. 6264, 77. 1343. McKivigan, John R. “Prisoner of Conscience: George Gordon and the Fugitive Slave Law,” Journal of Presbyterian History, 60, 4 (1982), pp. 336-54. 1344. Maclear, J. F. “The Evangelical Alliance and the Antislavery Crusade,” Huntington Library Quarterly, 42, 4 (1979), pp. 141-64. 1345. MacLeod, Duncan J. “From Gradualism to Immediatism: Another Look,” Slavery and Abolition, 3, 2 (1982), pp. 140-52. 1346. MacLeod, Duncan J. “Measuring Slavery (review essay: Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross),” Historical Journal, 18, 1 (1975), pp. 202-05. 1347. MacLeod, Duncan J. Slavery, Race, and the American Revolution. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1974. 1348. MacLeod, Duncan J. “Toward Caste,” in Berlin and Hoffman, eds., Slavery and Freedom in the Age of the American Revolution, pp. 217-36. 1349. McManus, Edgar J. “The Negro Under Slavery,” in Haynes ed., Blacks in White America Before 1865, pp. 134-47. (From A History of Negro Slavery in New York) 1350. McPherson, James M. “Slavery and Race (review essay: Genovese, Political Economy of Slavery, Freehling, Prelude to Civil War; Thomas, Slavery Attacked),” Perspectives in American History, 3(1969), pp. 460-73. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (304-17). 1351. *Magnaghi, Russell M. “The Origin and Disposition of Indian Slaves in the Lower Mississippi Valley” (Paper presented to the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, Colorado Springs, 1978). 1352. Mann, Susan A. “Slavery, Sharecropping, and Sexual Inequality,” Signs, 14, 4 (1989), pp. 774-98. 1353. Marable, Manning. “Groundings with my Sisters: Patriarchy and the Exploitation of Black Women,” Journal of Ethnic Studies, 11, 2 (1983), pp. 1-39. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women’s History, vol. 2, pp. 407-45. 1354. Marable, Manning. “The Meaning of Faith in the Black Mind in Slavery,” Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 30, 4 (1976), pp. 248-64. 1355. Margo, Robert A. “Civilian Occupations of Ex-Slaves in the Union Army,” in Fogel and Engerman, eds., Markets and Production: Technical Papers, vol. 1 (Without Consent or Contract), pp. 170-85. 1356. Margo, Robert A., and Richard H. Steckel. “The Heights of American Slaves: New Evidence on Slave Nutrition and Health,” Social Science History, 6, 4 (1982), pp. 516-38. 1357. Marketti, Jim. “Black Equity in the Slave Industry,” Review of Black Political Economy, 2, 2 (1972), pp. 43-66. 106 1358. Marshall, Mary Louise. “Plantation Medicine,” Bulletin of the Medical Library Association, 26, 3 (1937-38), pp. 115-28. 1359. Marshall, Mary Louise. “Plantation Medicine,” Bulletin of the Tulane University Medical Faculty, 1, 3 (1942), pp. 45-58. 1360. Martin, James Kirby, ed. Interpreting Colonial America: Selected Readings. New York: Harper and Row, 1973. For contents see Degler, and Morgan. 1361. Martin, Jean-Pierre. “Éléments statistiques: États-Unis 1800-1860,” in Martin and Ricard, eds., Une institution particulière, pp. 141-42. 1362. Martin, Jean-Pierre. “Emancipation of Slaves in the United States,” in Martin and Ricard, eds., Une institution particulière, pp. 137-39. 1363. Martin, Jean-Pierre, and Serge Ricard, eds. Une institution particulière; aspects de l’esclavage aux Etats-Unis. Aix-en-Provence: Université de Provence (dist. Jean Laffitte, Marseille), 1986. For contents see Arnavon-Lepinasse, Bandry, Bolner, Diouf, Martin (3), Planchard, and Ricard. 1364. Maslowki, Pete. “National Policy Toward the Use of Black Troops in the Revolution,” South Carolina Historical Magazine, 73, 1 (1972), pp. 1-17. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery, Revolutionary America, and the New Nation, pp. (379-95). 1365. Matlock, Gene D. “When Negroes Owned Slaves,” Negro Digest, 12, 5 (1963), pp. 72-82. 1366. Mathews, Donald G. “Religion and Slavery - the Case of the American South,” in Christine Bolt and Seymour Drescher, eds., Anti-Slavery, Religion and Reform: Essays in Memory of Roger Anstey (Folkestone: William Dawson & Sons, 1980), pp. 207-32. 1367. Mathews, Donald G. Slavery and Methodism: A Chapter in American Morality, 17801845. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1965. 1368. Matthewson, Timothy M. “Slavery and Diplomacy: The United States and Saint Dominique, 1791-1793” (PhD diss., University of California, Santa Barbara, 1976). 1369. Maxwell, John F. “The Anti-Slavery Society and the Campaign Against Slavery,” The Clergy Review (London), 59, 7 (1974), pp. 451-67. 1370. Maxwell, John F. “The Charismatic Origins of the Christian Anti-Slavery Movement in North America,” The Clergy Review (London), 60, 4 (1975), pp. 208-17. Also in Quaker History, 63, 2 (1974), pp. 108-16. 1371. May, Robert E. “John A. Quitman and His Slaves: Reconciling Slave Resistance with the Pro-Slavery Defense,” Journal of Southern History, 46, 4 (1980), pp. 551-70. 1372. Meaders, Daniel E. “Fugitive Slaves and Indentured Servants Before 1800” (PhD diss., Yale University, 1990). 107 1373. Meier, August. “Benjamin Quarles and the Historiography of Black America,” Civil War History, 26, 2 (1980), pp. 101-16. 1374. Meier, August. “Old Wine in New Bottles: A Review essay: Time on the Cross,” Civil War History, 20, 3 (1974), pp. 251-60. 1375. Meier, August. “Slavery: A Different View of the ‘Cross’ (review essay: Genovese, Roll, Jordan, Roll),” Reviews in American History, 3, 2 (1975), pp. 206-12. 1376. Meier, August, and Elliott Rudwick, eds. The Making of Black America: Essays in Negro Life and History. New York: Atheneum, 1969. For contents see Bascom, Bradford, Brewer, Degler, Fisher, Harding, Kilson, Settle, Twombly and Moore, and Wright. 1377. Meindl, Dieter. “American Slavery in Canadian Literature” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of ErlangenNürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 1378. Melder, Keith. “Slaves and Freedmen,” Wilson Quarterly, 13, 1 (1989), pp. 76-83. 1379. Mellon, James, ed. Bullwhip Days: The Slaves Remember. New York: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1988. 1380. Mellon, Matthew T. Early American Views on Negro Slavery. Boston: Meador, 1934. 1381. Metzer, Jacob. “The Records of U. S. Colored Troops as a Historical Source: An Exploratory Examination,” Historical Methods, 14, 3 (1981), pp. 123-31. 1382. Meuschel, Sigrid. Kapitalismus oder Sklaverei: die langwierige Durchsetzung der bürgerlichen Gesellschaft in den USA. Frankfurt am Main: Europäische Verlagsanstalt, 1981. 1383. Meyer, David R. “The Industrial Retardation of Southern Cities, 1860-1880,” Explorations in Economic History, 25, 4 (1988), pp. 366-86. 1384. Miller, Elinor, and Eugene D. Genovese, eds. Plantation, Town and County - Essays on the Local History of American Slave Society. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1974. For contents see Bonner, Corlew, Coulter, Curlee, Dorsett, Flanders, Gower, Hering, Hershberg, Moffat, Phifer, Phillips, Price, Reinders, Richter, Seip, Sitterson, Swearingen, Wall, Wood, and WPA Georgia Writers’ Project. 1385. Miller, M. Sammy. “The Law and Bondage in Early America,” Crisis, 83, 7 (1976), pp. 255-56. 1386. Miller, Randall M. “Black Catholics in the Slave South: Some Needs and Opportunities for Study,” Records of the American Catholic Historical Society of Philadelphia, 86 (1975), pp. 93-106. 1387. Miller, Randall M. ‘Dear Master’: Letters of a Slave Family. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1978. 1388. Miller, Randall M., ed. The Afro-American Slaves: Community or Chaos? Malabar, Fla: Robert E. Krieger, 1981. For contents see Blassingame, Fry, Genovese, Gutman, Joyner, Levine, Mullin, Webber, and Wood. 108 1389. Miller, Randall M., ed. “‘It is Good to be Religious’: A Loyal Slave on God, Masters, and the Civil War,” North Carolina Historical Review, 54, 1 (1977), pp. 66-71. 1390. Miller, Randall M., and John David Smith, eds. Dictionary of Afro-American Slavery. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1988. 1391. Miller, Richard Roscoe. Slavery and Catholicism. Durham: North State Publishers, 1977. 1392. Miller, William L. “J. E. Cairnes on the Economics of American Negro Slavery,” Southern Economic Journal, 30, 4 (1963-64), pp. 333-41. 1393. Mills, Gary B. “Coincoin: An Eighteenth Century ‘Liberated’ Woman,” Journal of Southern History, 42, 2 (1976), pp. 205-22. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 3, pp. 941-58. 1394. Mills, Gary B., and Elizabeth Shown. “Roots and the New ‘Faction’: A Legitimate Tool for Clio?” Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 89, 1 (1981), pp. 3-26. 1395. Modell, John. “Demographic Perspectives on Herbert Gutman’s Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1750-1925,” Social Science History, 3, 3-4 (1979), pp. 45-55. 1396. Mohr, Clarence L. “Southern Blacks in the Civil War: A Century of Historiography,” Journal of Negro History, 59, 2 (1974), pp. 177-95. 1397. Mooney, Chase C. “The Literature of Slavery: A Re-Evaluation,” Indiana Magazine of History, 47, 3 (1951), pp. 251-60. 1398. Moore, Wilbert E. American Negro Slavery and its Abolition. New York: Third Press, 1971. 1399. Moore, Wilbert E. “Slave Law and the Social Structure,” Journal of Negro History, 26, 2 (1941), pp. 171-202. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 325-57. 1400. Morgan, Edmund S. “Slavery and Freedom: The American Paradox,” Journal of American History, 59, 1 (1972), pp. 5-29. Reprinted in Hoffer, ed., Africans Become Afro-Americans, pp. 159-83; also in Stanley N. Katz and John M. Murrin, eds., Colonial America: Essays in Social Development (3rd ed.) (New York: Knopf, 1983), pp. 572-96; also in Finkelman, ed., Colonial Southern Slavery, pp. (261-85). 1401. Morgan, James C[alvin]. “Negro Culture in the United States: A Study of Four Models for Interpreting Slavery in the United States” (PhD diss., New York University, 1982). 1402. Morgan, James C. Slavery in the United States: Four Views. Jefferson, N.C., and London: McFarland, 1985. 1403. Morgan, Kathryn L. “The Ex-Slave Narrative as a Source for Folk History” (PhD diss., University of Pennsylvania, 1970). 109 1404. Morris, Thomas D. “‘As If the Injury was Effected by the Natural Elements of Air, or Fire’: Slave Wrongs and the Liability of Masters,” Law and Society Review, 16, 4 (198182), pp. 569-99. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 375-405. 1405. Morris, Thomas D. “‘Society is not Marked by Punctuality in the Payment of Debts’: The Chattel Mortgages of Slaves,” in David J. Bodenhamer and James W. Ely, Jr., eds., Ambivalent Legacy: A Legal History of the South (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1984), pp. 147-70. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (261-84). 1406. Morris, Thomas D. “‘Villeinage ... as it existed in England, reflects but little light on our subject’: The Problem of the ‘Sources’ of Southern Slave Law,” American Journal of Legal History, 32, 2 (1988), pp. 95-137. 1407. Morrison, Larry R. “‘Nearer to the Brute Creation’: The Scientific Defense of American Slavery Before 1830,” Southern Studies, 19, 3 (1980), pp. 228-42. 1408. Mugleston, William F. “Southern Literature as History: Slavery in the Antebellum Novel,” History Teacher, 8, 1 (1974), pp. 17-30. 1409. Mullin, Gerald W. “Rethinking American Negro Slavery From the Vantage Point of the Colonial Era,” Louisiana Studies, 12, 2 (1973), pp. 398-422. Reprinted in Miller, ed., Afro-American Slaves, pp. 24-37; also in Finkelman, ed., Colonial Southern Slavery, pp. (352-76). 1410. Mullin, Gerald W. (Review essay: Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross), William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 32, 3 (1975), pp. 496-500. 1411. Mullin, Michael, ed. American Negro Slavery: A Documentary History. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1976. 1412. Mullin, Robert Bruce. “Biblical Critics and the Battle Over Slavery,” Journal of Presbyterian History, 61, 2 (1983), pp. 210-26. 1413. Murphy, Jeanette R. “The Survival of African Music in America,” in Jackson, ed., The Negro and his Folklore, pp. 327-39. Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-148. 1414. Myers, John L. “The Writing of History of the Rise and Fall of the Slave Power in America,” Civil War History, 31, 2 (1985), pp. 144-62. 1415. Naison, Mark. “Course Syllabus: Afro-American History, 1512-1865,” Radical History Review, 3, 1-2 (1975), pp. 92-95. 1416. Nash, Gary B. “The African Response to Slavery,” in The African Diaspora: Africans and their Descendants in the Wider World to 1800 (Written and edited by The Black Diaspora Committee of Howard University) (Lexington, Mass.: Ginn Press, 1986), pp. 347-70. (Reprinted from Red, White, and Black.) 1417. Nash, Gary B. “Afro-American History in the Revolutionary Era,” Journal of Ethnic Studies, 9, 1 (1981), pp. 89-95. 110 1418. Nash, Gary B. “Red, White, and Black: The Origins of Racism in Colonial America,” in Gary B. Nash and Richard Weiss, eds., The Great Fear: Race in the Mind of America (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970), pp. 1-26. Reprinted in Noel, ed., Origins of American Slavery and Racism, pp. 131-52. 1419. Nash, Gary B. Red, White, and Black: The Peoples of Early America. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1974. 2nd ed., 1982. 1420. Nash, Howard P., Jr. “General Butler’s Fugitive Slave Law,” Negro Digest, 13, 6 (1964), pp. 19-23. 1421. Nelson, William Stuart. “The Christian Church and Slavery in America,” Howard Review, 2, 1 (1925), pp. 41-77. 1422. Newton, James E. “Slave Artisans and Craftsmen: The Roots of Afro-American Art,” Black Scholar, 9, 3 (1977), pp. 35-42. Reprinted in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 233-41. 1423. Newton, James E., and Ronald L. Lewis, eds. The Other Slaves: Mechanics, Artisans, and Craftsmen. Boston: G. K. Hall, 1978. For contents see Dew, Dover, Dubois (2), Hopkins, Jernegan, Lewis, Locke, Moore, Newton, New York Times Magazine, Porter, Robert, Spero and Harris, Starobin, Stavisky (2), Stealy, and Wesley. 1424. New York Times Magazine (August, 1926). “Negro’s Art Lives in his Wrought Iron,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 14-15. 1425. Nichols, Charles H. Many Thousand Gone: The Ex-Slaves’ Account of Their Bondage and Freedom. Leiden: Brill, 1963. 1426. Nichols, Charles H., comp. Black Men in Chains: Narratives by Escaped Slaves. New York: Hill, 1972. 1427. Nichols, William W. “Slave Narratives: Dismissed Evidence in the Writing of Southern History,” Phylon, 32, 4 (1971), pp. 403-09. 1428. Noel, Donald L., ed. The Origins of American Slavery and Racism. Columbus: Merrill, 1972. For contents see Boskin, Degler, Handlin and Handlin, Jordan, Nash, and Noel. 1429. Noonan, John T., Jr. The Antelope: The Ordeal of Recaptured Africans in the Administrations of James Monroe and John Quincy Adams. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1977. Reprinted 1990. 1430. Norton, Mary Beth, Herbert G. Gutman, and Ira Berlin. “The Afro-American Family in the Age of Revolution,” in Berlin and Hoffman, eds., Slavery and Freedom in the Age of the American Revolution, pp. 175-91. 1431. Novack, George E. “The Colonial Plantation System,” in Robert Himmel, ed., Marxist Essays in American History (New York: Merit Publishers, 1966), pp. 37-39. 1432. Novack, George E. “Negro Slavery in North America,” in Robert Himmel, ed., Marxist Essays in American History (New York: Merit Publishers, 1966), pp. 33-36. 111 1433. Oakes, James. “The Political Significance of Slave Resistance,” History Workshop: A Journal of Socialist and Feminist Historians, 22 (1986), pp. 89-107. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp.(309-27). 1434. Oakes, James. The Ruling Race: A History of American Slaveholders. New York: Knopf, 1982. 1435. *Ofcansky, Thomas P. “North American Slavery in the Eighteenth Century,” East Central/American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies Newsletter, (Fall, 1979), pp. . 1436. Ohline, Howard A. “Slavery, Economics, and Congressional Politics, 1790,” Journal of Southern History, 46, 3 (1980), pp. 335-60. 1437. Okoye, F. Nwabueze. “Chattel Slavery as the Nightmare of the American Revolutionaries,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 37, 1 (1980), pp. 3-28. 1438. Olson, James S. Slave Life in America: A Historiography and Selected Bibliography. Lanham: University Press of America, 1983. 1439. Olson, James S. “Slaves, Psyches and History,” Journal of Ethnic Studies, 11, 3 (1983), pp. 95-110. 1440. Oneal, James. “The Philosophy of the Slave Regime,” Modern Quarterly, 3 (1925), pp. 38-50. 1441. Onstott, Kyle. “The Truth About Slavery in America,” Negro Digest, 10, 8 (1961), pp. 55-68. 1442. *Orser, Charles E., Jr. “Out of Slavery: The Material Culture of Slavery” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Symposium on Language and Culture in South Carolina, University of South Carolina, Columbia, 1986). 1443. Orser, Charles E., Jr. “The Past Ten Years of Plantation Archaeology in the Southeastern United States,” Southeastern Archaeology, 3, 1 (1984), pp. 1-12. 1444. *Orser, Charles E., Jr. “The Use of Plantation Archaeology” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Historical Association, Charlotte, 1986). 1445. *Orser, Charles E., Jr. “What Good Is Plantation Archaeology?” Southern Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the South, 24 (1986), pp. 444-55. 1446. *Orser, Charles E., Jr., ed., “Historical Archaeology on Southern Plantations and Farms,” Historical Archaeology, 24, 4 (1990), pp. 1-6. 1447. Ortù, Leopoldo. “La schiavitù, ‘istituzione peculiare’ degli Stati Uniti d’America, del 1787 a 1860,” Annali della Facoltà di Lettere Filosofia e Magistero dell’Università di Cagliari, 35 (1972), pp. 329-82. 1448. Osofsky, Gilbert, ed. Puttin’ on Ole Massa: The Slave Narratives of Henry Bibb, William Wells Brown, and Solomon Northrup. New York: Harper and Row, 1969. 1449. Ostendorf, Berndt. “Creole Slavery and Its Cultural Legacy” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of ErlangenNürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 112 1450. Otto, John Solomon. “A New Look at Slave Life,” Natural History, 88, 1 (1979), pp. 8-30. 1451. Owens, Harry P., ed. Perspectives and Irony in American Slavery. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1976. For contents see Blassingame, Davis, Degler, Engerman, Genovese, Scarborough, and Stampp. 1452. Owens, Leslie H. “Blacks in The Slave Community,” in Gilmore, ed., Revisiting Blassingame’s The Slave Community, pp. 61-70. 1453. Owens, Leslie H. This Species of Property: Slave Life and Culture in the Old South. New York: Oxford University Press, 1976. 1454. Palmer, Jaclyn C. “Images of Slavery: Black and White Writers,” Negro History Bulletin, 41, 5 (1978), pp. 888-89. 1455. Parish, Peter J. “Ethics and Economics: Slavery and Antislavery Re-Examined (review essay: Fogel, Without Consent or Contract),” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 75, 1 (1991), pp. 43-75. 1456. Parish, Peter J. “The Instruments of Providence: Slavery, Civil War and the American Churches,” in W. J. Sheils, ed., The Church and War (London: Blackwell, 1983), pp. 291-320. (Ecclesiastical History Society, Studies in Church History, 20) 1457. Parish, Peter J. Slavery: History and Historians. New York: Harper and Row, 1989. 1458. Parish, Peter J. Slavery: The Many Faces of a Southern Institution. Durham: British Association for American Studies, 1979. 1459. Parker, William N. “The Slave Plantation in American Agriculture,” Contributions to the (First) International Conference of Economic History (Stockholm, 1960) (Paris: Mouton, 1960), pp. 321-31. 1460. Parker, William N. “Slavery and Economic Development: An Hypothesis and Some Evidence,” Agricultural History, 44, 1 (1970), pp. 115-25. 1461. Passell, Peter, and Gavin Wright. “The Effects of Pre-Civil War Territorial Expansion on the Price of Slaves,” Journal of Political Economy, 80, 6 (1972), pp. 1188-1202. 1462. Patterson, David L. “The Constitution: An Exslave Interpretation” (PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley, 1978). 1463. Patterson, Orlando. “The Unholy Trinity: Freedom, Slavery, and the American Constitution,” Social Research, 54, 3 (1987), pp. 543-77. 1464. Patterson, Orlando. “Toward a Study of Black America: Notes on the Culture of Racism,” Dissent, 36, 4 (1989), pp. 476-86. 1465. Peniston, Gregory S. “The Slave Builder-Artisan,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 2, 4 (1978), pp. 284-95. 1466. Perkins, Eric. “Roll, Jordan, Roll: A ‘Marx’ for the Master Class,” Radical History Review, 3, 4 (1976), pp. 41-59. 113 1467. Perotin, C. “Le courant abolitionniste dans la littérature américaine de 1808 à 1861” (Diss., Université de Paris IV, 1973). 1468. Phillips, Ulrich B. American Negro Slavery: A Survey of the Supply, Employment and Control of Negro Labor as Determined by the Plantation Regime. New York: Appleton, 1918. 1469. Phillips, Ulrich B. “Black-Belt Labor, Slave and Free,” in Lectures and Addresses on the Negro in the South (Charlottesville: Michie, 1915), pp. 29-36. (Publications of the University of Virginia: Phelps-Stokes Fellowship Papers) 1470. Phillips, Ulrich B. “The Central Theme of Southern History,” American Historical Review, 34, 1 (1928), pp. 30-43. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (398-411). 1471. Phillips, Ulrich B. Life and Labor in the Old South. Boston: Little, Brown, 1929. 1472. Phillips, Ulrich B. “Plantations with Slave Labor and Free,” American Historical Review, 30, 4 (1925), pp. 728-53. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (412-27). 1473. Phillips, Ulrich B. “Slavery in the Old South,” in Rose, ed., Americans from Africa, vol. 1, pp. 117-30. 1474. Piersen, William D. “White Cannibals, Black Martyrs: Fear, Depression, and Religious Faith as Causes of Suicide Among New Slaves,” Journal of Negro History, 62, 2 (1977), pp. 147-59. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slave Trade and Migration, pp. (323-35). 1475. Pitman, Frank Wesley. “Fetishism, Witchcraft and Christianity among the Slaves,” Journal of Negro History, 11, 4 (1926), pp. 650-68. 1476. Placucci, A. “Cristianismo e schiavitù negra negli Stati Uniti d’America (16191865)” (Diss., Pontificia Universitas Urbaniana, V, 1972). 1477. Polsky, Milton. “American Slave Narrative: Dramatic Resource Material for the Classroom,” Journal of Negro Education, 45 (1976), pp. 166-78. Also in Negro Educational Review, 26 (1975), pp. 22-36. 1478. Pontoppidan, Morten Oxenboll. Kampen mod Negerslaveriet i de Forenede Stater: en historisk skildring. Copenhagen: G. E. C. Gad, 1925. 1479. Porter, James A. “Negro Craftsmen and Artists of Pre-Civil War Days,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 209-20. 1480. Posey, Walter Brownlow. “Influence of Slavery upon the Methodist Church in the Early South and Southwest,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 17, 4 (1931), pp. 530-42. 1481. Postell, William D. “Slaves and their Life Expectancy,” Bulletin of the Tulane University Medical Faculty, 26, 1 (1967), pp. 7-11. 1482. Pressly, Thomas J., and Harvey H. Chamberlin. “Slavery and Scholarship: Some Problems of Evidence (review essay: Fogel and Engerman, Time on the Cross, and Blassingame, Slave Community),” Pacific Northwest Quarterly, 66, 2 (1975), pp. 79-84. 114 1483. Puckett, N. N. “Names of American Negro Slaves,” in George Peter Murdock, ed., Studies in the Science of Society Presented to Albert Galloway Keller (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1937), pp. 471-94. 1484. Pugh, Evelyn L. “Women and Slavery: Julia Gardiner Tyler and the Duchess of Sutherland,” Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 88, 2 (1980), pp. 186-202. 1485. Putnam, Mary Burnham. The Baptists and Slavery, 1840-1845. Ann Arbor, Mich.: G. Wahr, 1913. 1486. Pybus, Cassandra. “Eugene D. Genovese: The Neo-Marxist Interpretation of the Slave South,” Flinders Journal of History and Politics, 3 (1973), pp. 32-44. 1487. Quarles, Benjamin. “Antebellum Free Blacks and the ‘Spirit of ‘76’,” Journal of Negro History, 61, 3 (1976), pp. 229-42. 1488. Quarles, Benjamin. “Black History Unbound,” Daedalus, 103, 2 (1974), pp. 16378. 1489. Quarles, Benjamin. “The Colonial Militia and Negro Manpower.” Reprinted in Hoffer, ed., Africans Become Afro-Americans, pp. 64-73. 1490. Quarles, Benjamin. “The Revolutionary War as a Black Declaration of Independence,” in Berlin and Hoffman, eds., Slavery and Freedom in the Age of the American Revolution, pp. 283-301. 1491. Raboteau, Albert J. “The Slave Church in the Era of the American Revolution,” in Berlin and Hoffman, eds., Slavery and Freedom in the Age of the American Revolution, pp. 193213. 1492. Raboteau, Albert J., and David W. Wills, with Randall K. Burkett, Will B. Gravely, and James Melvin Washington. “Retelling Carter Woodson’s Story: Archival Sources for Afro-American Church History,” Journal of American History, 77, 1 (1990), pp. 183-99. 1493. Radical History Review, 4, 2-3 (1977), pp. 76-108. Special “Symposium on Herbert Gutman’s The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom. For contents see Barnett, Fink, and Rawick. 1494. Rampersad, Arnold. “Slavery and the Literary Imagination: Du Bois’s Souls of Black Folk,” in Deborah E. McDowell and Arnold Rampersad, eds., Slavery and the Literary Imagination (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989), pp. 104-24. 1495. Rankin, David C. “The Politics of Slavery (review essay: Cooper, Liberty and Slavery),” Reviews in American History, 12, 2 (1984), pp. 220-24. 1496. Ratcliffe, Donald. “The Das Kapital of American Negro Slavery? Time on the Cross after Two Years (review article),” Durham University Journal, 69, 1 (1976), pp. 103-30. 1497. Rawick, George P. From Sundown to Sunup: The Making of the Black Community. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1972. 1489. Rawick, George P. “Self-Organization under Slavery,” Radical History Review, 4, 23 (1977), pp. 79-91. 115 1499. Rawick, George P. “Some Notes on a Social Analysis of Slavery: A Critique and Assessment of The Slave Community,” in Gilmore, ed., Revisiting Blassingame’s The Slave Community, pp. 17-26. 1500. Rawick, George P., ed. The American Slave: A Composite Autobiography. 19 vols. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1972. 1501. Rawick, George P., ed. The American Slave: A Composite Autobiography, Supplement, Series II. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1979. 1502. Reed, Harry A. “The Slave as Abolitionist: Henry Highland Garnet’s Address to the Slaves of the United States of America,” Centennial Review, 20, 4 (1976), pp. 385-94. 1503. Reed, Harry A. “Henry Highland Garnet’s ‘Address to the Slaves of the United States of America’ Reconsidered,” also published in Western Journal of Black Studies, 9, 3 (1985), pp. 126-34. 1504. Ricard, Serge. “Cautious Radicalism in the Early Republic: Thomas Jefferson and Slavery,” in Martin and Ricard, eds., Une institution particulière, pp. 21-32. 1505. Rice, C. Duncan. “The Indestructible Institution (review essay: Gutman, Black Family in Slavery and Freedom),” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 8, 2 (1977), pp. 343-52. 1506. Rice, Madeline Hooke. American Catholic Opinion in the Slavery Controversy. New York: Columbia University Press, 1944. 1507. Rinchon, [P.] Dieudonné. L’esclavage aux Etats-Unis: aperçu historique et bibliographie. Paris: Vanelsche, 1952. 1508. Roark, James L. “Mastering Slavery (review essay: Rose, Slavery and Freedom),” Reviews in American History, 11, 1 (1983), pp. 72-76. 1509. Robert, John Clarke. “Slavery in Tobacco Factories,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 135-44. 1510. Roberts, John W. From Trickster to Badman: The Black Folk Hero in Slavery and Freedom. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1989. 1511. Roberts, Wesley A. “The Black Experience and the American Revolution,” Fides et Historia, 8, 2 (1976), pp. 50-62. 1512. Robinson, Donald L. “Slavery and Sectionalism in the Founding of the United States, 1787-1808” (PhD diss., Cornell University, 1966). 1513. Robinson, Donald L. Slavery in the Structure of American Politics, 1765-1820. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1971. 1514. Robinson, Jean Wealmont. “Black Healers during the Colonial Period and Early 19th Century America” (PhD diss., Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, 1979). 1515. Roediger, David R. “And Die in Dixie: Funerals, Death and Heaven in the Slave Community, 1700-1865,” Massachusetts Review, 22, 1 (1981), pp. 163-83. 1516. Roediger, David R. “The Meaning of Africa for the American Slave,” Journal of Ethnic Studies, 4, 4 (1977), pp. 1-15. 1517. Rose, Peter I., ed. Americans from Africa. 2 vols. New York: Atherton, 1970. 116 For contents see Bauer and Bauer, Caulfield, Elkins, Genovese (2), Jordan, Mullin, Phillips, Thelwell, and Thorpe. 1518. Rose, Willie Lee. “An American Family (review essay: Haley, Roots),” New York Review of Books, 23, 18 (11 Nov. 1976), pp. 3-6. Reprinted in Rose (Freehling ed.), Slavery and Freedom, pp. 115-23. 1519. Rose, Willie Lee. “The Impact of the American Revolution on the Black Population,” in Larry R. Gerlach, James A. Dolph, and Michael L. Nicholls, eds., Legacies of the American Revolution (Logan, Utah: Utah State University Press, 1978), pp. 183-97. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery, Revolutionary America, and the New Nation, pp. (411-25). 1520. Rose, Willie Lee. “Off the Plantation (review essay: Berlin, Slaves without Masters, and other works),” New York Review of Books, 22, 14 (18 Sept. 1975), pp. 46-49. Reprinted in Rose (Freehling, ed.), Slavery and Freedom, pp. 137-49. 1521. Rose, Willie Lee. Slavery and Freedom. Ed. William W. Freehling. New York: Oxford University Press, 1982. 1522. Rose, Willie Lee. “What We Didn’t Know about Slavery (review essay: Degler, Neither Black nor White, Dunn, Sugar and Slaves, Craven, White, Red and Black, and Wood, Black Majority),” New York Review of Books, 21, 16 (17 Oct. 1974), pp. 29-33. Reprinted in Rose (Freehling, ed.), Slavery and Freedom, pp. 150-63. 1523. Rose, Willie Lee, ed. A Documentary History of Slavery in North America. New York: Oxford University Press, 1976. 1524. Rosemond, Sarah Louise. “The Mythic Black Hero: From Slavery to Freedom” (PhD diss., Florida State University, 1983). 1525. Rubin, Ernest. “Les esclaves aux Etats-Unis de 1790 à 1860: données sur leur nombre et leurs caracteristiques démographiques,” Population, 14, 1 (1959), pp. 33-46. 1526. Russel, Robert R. “The Economic History of Negro Slavery in the United States,” Agricultural History, 11, 4 (1937), pp. 308-21. Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-258. 1527. Russel, Robert R. “The General Effects of Slavery upon Southern Economic Progress,” Journal of Southern History, 6, 1 (1938), pp. 34-54. Reprinted in Aitken, ed., Did Slavery Pay?, pp. 84-107. 1528. Russell, Marion J. “American Slave Discontent in Records of the High Courts,” Journal of Negro History, 31, 4 (1946), pp. 411-34. 1529. *Salwen, Bert, and Geoffrey M. Gyrisco. “Archeology of Black American Culture: An Annotated Bibliography” (U. S. Department of Interior, National Park Service, n.d.[1978]). 1530. Sanders, Cheryl J. “Religious Conversion, Ethics, and the Afro-American Slave: Evaluating Alternative Approaches,” Journal of Religious Thought, 45, 2 (1989), pp. 7-20. 117 1531. Sanderson, Warren C. “A Cliometric Reconsideration of Herbert Gutman’s Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1750-1925,” Social Science History, 3, 3-4 (1979), pp. 66-85. 1532. Sandin, Bengt. “Sklaven som medelklassamerikan: Fogel och Engerman och debatten om slaveriet i USA,” Historisk tidskrift (Stockholm), 97, 1 (1977), pp. 39-70. With English summary. 1533. Savitt, Todd L. “Black Health on the Plantation: Masters, Slaves, and Physicians,” in Judith Walzer Leavitt and Ronald L. Numbers, eds., Sickness and Health in America: Readings in the History of Medicine and Public Health (2nd rev. ed.) (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1985), pp. 313-30. Reprinted in Ronald L. Numbers and idem, eds., Science and Medicine in the Old South (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989), pp. 327-55; also in Finkelman, ed., Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery, pp. (243-71). 1534. Savitt, Todd L. Medicine and Slavery. Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 1979. 1535. Savitt, Todd L. “Slave Health and Southern Distinctiveness,” in idem and James Harvey Young, eds. Disease and Distinctiveness in the American South (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1988), pp. 120-53. 1536. Savitt, Todd L. “Slave Life Insurance in Virginia and North Carolina,” Journal of Southern History, 43, 4 (1977), pp. 583-600. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (441-58). 1537. Savitt, Todd L. “The Use of Blacks for Medical Experimentation and Demonstration in the Old South,” Journal of Southern History, 48, 3 (1982), pp. 331-48. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery, pp. (273-90). 1538. Scarborough, William K. The Overseer: Plantation Management in the Old South. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1966. 1539. Scarborough, William K. “Slavery - The White Man’s Burden,” in Owens, ed., Perspectives and Irony, pp. 103-35. 1540. Schaefer, Donald F., and Mark D. Schmitz. “The Relative Efficiency of Slave Agriculture: A Comment,” American Economic Review, 69, 1 (1979), pp. 208-12. 1541. *Scheiber, Harry N. “Black is Computable,” American Soldier, 44 (1975), pp. 65673. 1542. Scherer, Lester B. “A New Look at Personal Slavery Established,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 30, 4 (1973), pp. 645-52. 1543. Scherer, Lester B. Slavery and the Churches in Early America, 1619-1819. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1975. 1544. Schlüter, Herman. Lincoln, Labor and Slavery: A Chapter from the Social History of America. New York: Socialist Literature, 1913. (Reprinted, New York: Russell and Russell, 1965). 118 1545. Schmitz, Mark D., and Donald Schaefer. “Paradox Lost: Westward Expansion and Slave Prices Before the Civil War,” Journal of Economic History, 41, 2 (1981), pp. 402-07. 1546. Schweninger, Loren. “Black-Owned Businesses in the South, 1790-1880,” Business History Review, 63, 1 (1990), pp. 22-60. 1547. Scott, John Anthony. Hard Trials on My Way: Slavery and the Struggle Against It, 1800-1860. New York: Knopf, 1974. 1548. Scruggs, Otey M. “Studies in American Negro Slavery: A Review Essay (of Owens, ed. Perspectives and Irony, Campbell and Lower, Wealth and Power in Antebellum Texas, and Goldin, Urban Slavery),” Agricultural History, 53, 2 (1979), pp. 506-12. 1549. Sellers, Charles Grier, Jr. “The Travail of Slavery,” in Sellers, ed., The Southerner as American (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1960), pp. 40-71. Reprinted in Weinstein and Gatell, eds., American Negro Slavery (1st ed.), pp. 172-98. 1550. Sellin, Johan Thorsten. Slavery and the Penal System. New York: Elsevier, 1976. 1551. Sernett, Milton C. Black Religion and American Evangelicalism: White Protestants, Plantation Missions, and the Flowering of Negro Christianity, 1787-1865. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1975. 1552. Settle, E. Ophelia. “Social Attitudes During the Slave Regime: Household Servants versus Field Hands,” in Racial Contacts and Social Research (American Sociological Society), 28 (1933), pp. 95-98. Reprinted in Meier and Rudwick, eds., Making of Black America, vol. 1, pp. 148-52. 1553. Shaffer, Arthur H. “Between Two Worlds: David Ramsay and the Politics of Slavery,” Journal of Southern History, 50, 2 (1984), pp. 175-96. 1554. Shapiro, Herbert. “Historiography and Slave Revolt and Rebelliousness in the United States: A Class Approach,” in Okihiro, ed., In Resistance, pp. 133-42. 1555. Shapiro, Herbert. “The Impact of the Aptheker Thesis: A Retrospective View of American Negro Slave Revolts,” Science and Society, 48, 1 (1984), pp. 52-73. 1556. Sheperd, Gloria. “The Rape of Black Women During Slavery” (PhD diss., SUNY - Albany, 1988). 1557. Sherman, Shirley. “The White Woman and Slavery: With Emphasis on Her Portrayal in Some Black Literature,” Journal of Ethnic Studies, 3, 1 (1976), pp. 63-69. 1558. Sherrard, Owen Aubrey. Freedom from Fear: The Slave and his Emancipation. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1961. 1559. Shore, Laurence. “The Poverty of Tragedy in Historical Writing on Southern Slavery,” South Atlantic Quarterly, 85, 2 (1986), pp. 147-64. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (429-46). 1560. Short, Kenneth R. M. “English Baptists and American Slavery,” Baptist Quarterly, 20, 6 (1964), pp. 243-62. 1561. Sides, Sudie Duncan. “Slave Weddings and Religion,” History Today, 24, 2 (1974), pp. 77-87. 119 1562. Sides, Sudie Duncan. “Southern Women and Slavery, Part One: Before the Civil War,” History Today, 20, 1 (1970), pp. 54-60. 1563. Sides, Sudie Duncan. “Southern Women and Slavery, Part Two,” History Today, 20, 2 (1970), pp. 124-30. 1564. Sides, Sudie Duncan. “Women and Slaves: An Interpretation Based on the Writings of Southern Women” (PhD diss., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1969). 1565. Siegel, Fred. “Parameters for Paternalism,” Radical History Review, 3, 4 (1976), pp. 60-67. 1566. Sikes, Lewright. “Medical Care for Slaves: A Preview essay: the Welfare State,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 62, 4 (1968), pp. 405-13. 1567. Silverman, Jason H. “Kentucky, Canada, and Extradition: The Jesse Happy Case (fugitive slaves),” Filson Club History Quarterly, 54, 1 (1980), pp. 50-60. 1568. Singleton, Theresa A. “An Archaeological Framework for Slavery and Emancipation, 1740-1880,” in Mark P. Leone and Parker B. Potter, Jr., eds., The Recovery of Meaning: Historical Archaeology in the Eastern United States (Washington and London: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1988), pp. 345-70. 1569. Singleton, Theresa A. “Archaeological Implications for Changing Labor Conditions,” in idem, ed., Archaeology of Slavery, pp. 291-307. 1570. Singleton, Theresa A. “The Archaeology of the Plantation South: A Review of Approaches and Goals,” Historical Archaeology, 24, 4 (1990), pp. 70-77. 1571. Singleton, Theresa A. “Breaking New Ground: Archaeologists are Unearthing New Evidence of the Crucial Role Slaves Played in Shaping the Early South,” Southern Exposure, 16, 2 (1988), pp. 18-22. 1572. *Singleton, Theresa A., and Tyson Gibbs. “Archaeology of Slave Sites: Nutrition and Diet,” Journal of Negro History, forthcoming. 1573. Slave Insurrections: Selected Documents. Westport, Conn.: Negro Universities Press, 1970. 1574. Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery in the United States from Interviews with Former Slaves. Washington: Federal Writers’ Project, 1941. 1575. Slavery in the States: Selected Essays. New York: Negro Universities Press, 1969. For contents see Bassett, Colley, Johnston, Morgan, and Steiner. 1576. Slavery Source Materials (microfiche). Frederick, Md.: University Publications of America, 1989. 1577. Smith, Burton M. “A Study of American Historians and Their Interpretation of Negro Slavery in the United States” (PhD diss., Washington State University, 1970). 1578. Smith, Daniel Blake. Inside the Great House: Planter Family Life in Eighteenth-Century Chesapeake Society. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1980. 120 1579. Smith, Dwight L. Afro-American History: A Bibliography. Santa Barbara: Clio Press, 1974. 1580. Smith, Earl. “William Cooper Nell on the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850,” Journal of Negro History, 66, 1 (1981), pp. 37-40. 1581. Smith, Elbert B. The Death of Slavery: The United States, 1837-1865. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1967. 1582. Smith, John David. “A Different View of Slavery: Black Historians Attack the Proslavery Argument, 1890-1920,” Journal of Negro History, 65, 4 (1980), pp. 298-311. 1583. Smith, John David. “The Formative Period of American Slave Historiography” (PhD diss., University of Kentucky, 1977). 1584. Smith, John David. “Historical or Personal Criticism? Frederic Bancroft vs. Ulrich B. Phillips,” Washington State University Research Studies, 49, 2 (1981), pp. 73-86. 1585. Smith, John David. “The Historiographic Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of Ulrich Bonnell Phillips,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 65, 2 (1981), pp. 138-53. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (464-79). 1586. Smith, John David. “‘Keep ‘em in a Fire-Proof Vault’: Pioneer Southern Historians Discover Plantation Records,” South Atlantic Quarterly, 78, 3 (1979), pp. 376-91. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (448-63). 1587. Smith, John David. “More than Slaves, Less than Freedmen: The ‘Share Wages’ Labor System,” Civil War History, 26, 3 (1980), pp. 256-66. 1588. Smith, John David. “An Old Creed for the New South: Southern Historians and the Revival of the Proslavery Argument, 1890-1920,” Southern Studies, 18, 1 (1979), pp. 7587. 1589. Smith, John David. “The Unveiling of Slave Folk Culture, 1865-1920,” Journal of Folklore Research, 21, 1 (1984), pp. 47-62. 1590. Smith, T. V. “Slavery and the American Doctrine of Equality,” Southwestern Political and Social Science Quarterly, 7, 4 (1927), pp. 333-52. 1591. Smith, William Henry. A Political History of Slavery: Being an Account of the Slavery Controversy from the Earliest Agitation in the Eighteenth Century to the Close of the Reconstruction Period in America. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1903. 1592. Sobel, Mechal. “‘All Americans are Part African’: Slave Influence and ‘White’ Values,” in Archer, ed., Slavery and Other Forms of Unfree Labour, pp. 176-87. 1593. Sobel, Mechal. Trabelin’ On: The Slave Journey to an Afro-Baptist Faith. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1979. 1594. Soderlund, Jean R. Quakers and Slavery: A Divided Spirit. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985. 1595. Sokolow, Jayme A. “The Emancipation of Black Abolitionists (review essay: Blackett, Building an Antislavery Wall),” Reviews in American History, 12, 1 (1984), pp. 45-50. 1596. “Some Usages of Long-Ago,” Americana, 17, 4 (1923), pp. 399-426. 121 1597. Sonnino, Paul, and Rick Sturdevant. “Marxism for Mystics (discussion of Luraghi, ‘Wage Labor ...’),” Plantation Society in the Americas, 1, 2 (1979), pp. 281-86. 1598. Soule, Joshua. “The Methodist Church and Slavery,” Methodist Quarterly Review, 57, 4 (1908), pp. 637-50. 1599. Southern Studies, 16, 4 (1977). Special issue on Colonial Slavery (British North America). For contents see Cody, Greenberg, Engerman, Kulikoff, and Menard. Also listed under Engerman, ed. 1600. Spero, Sterling D., and Abram L. Harris. “The Slave Regime: Competition Between Negro and White Labor,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 41-50. 1601. Stampp, Kenneth M. “The Historian and Southern Negro Slavery,” American Historical Review, 57, 3 (1952), pp. 613-24. Reprinted in Weinstein and Gatell, eds., American Negro Slavery (1st ed.), pp. 221-33; also in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (481-92). Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. H-204. 1602. Stampp, Kenneth M. “Introduction,” in David, et al., Reckoning with Slavery, pp. 130. 1603. Stampp, Kenneth M. “Rebels and Sambos: The Search for the Negro’s Personality in Slavery,” Journal of Southern History, 37, 3 (1971), pp. 367-92. Reprinted as “Rebels and Sambos,” in Weinstein, Gatell, and Sarasohn, eds., American Negro Slavery (3rd ed.), pp. 228-54; also in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp.(361-86). 1604. Stampp, Kenneth M. “Slavery - The Historian’s Burden,” in Owens, ed., Perspectives and Irony, pp. 153-70. 1605. Stange, Douglas C. “‘A Compassionate Mother to Her Poor Negro Slaves’: The Lutheran Church and Negro Slavery in Early America,” Phylon, 29, 3 (1968), pp. 272-81. 1606. Stange, Douglas C. “From Treason to Antislavery Patriotism, Unitarian Conservatives and the Fugitive Slave Law,” Harvard Library Bulletin, 25, 4 (1977), pp. 46688. 1607. Stange, Douglas C. Patterns of Anti-Slavery Among American Unitarians, 1831-1860. Rutherford, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1977. 1608. Starkey, Marion L. Striving to Make it my Home: The Story of Americans from Africa. New York: Norton, 1964. 1609. Starling, Marion W. The Slave Narrative: Its Place in American History. Boston: G. K. Hall, 1981. 2nd ed. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Pres, 1988. 1610. Starobin, Robert S., ed. Blacks in Bondage: Letters of American Slaves. New York: New Viewpoints, 1974. New edition with foreword by Ira Berlin. New York: M. Weiner, 1988. 122 1611. Starobin, Robert S., ed. Slavery as it Was: The Testimony of the Slaves Themselves While in Bondage. Chicago, 1971. 1612. Starr, Raymond. “Historians and the Origins of British North American Slavery,” Historian, 36, 1 (1973), pp. 1-18. 1613. Stavisky, Leonard. “Negro Craftsmanship in Early America,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 193-203. 1614. Stavisky, Leonard. “The Origins of Negro Craftsmen in Colonial America,” in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 183-91. 1615. Steckel, Richard H. “Birth Weights and Infant Mortality among American Slaves,” Explorations in Economic History, 23 (1986), pp. 173-98. 1616. 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Wood, Peter H. “‘Taking Care of Business’ in Revolutionary South Carolina: Republicanism and the Slave Society,” in Jeffrey J. Crow and Larry E. Tise, eds., The Southern Experience in the American Revolution (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1978), pp. 268-93. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery, Revolutionary America, and the New Nation, pp. (446-89). 1732. Wood, Peter H., Peter Dimock, and Barbara Clark Smith. “Three Responses to Nathan Huggins’s ‘The Deforming Mirror of Truth’,” Radical History Review, 49 (1991), pp. 25-48. 1733. Woodman, Harold D. “Economic History and Economic Theory: The New Economic History in America,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 3, 2 (1972), pp. 323-50. 1734. Woodman, Harold D. “The Profitability of Slavery: A Historical Perennial,” Journal of Southern History, 29, 3 (1963), pp. 303-25. 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Blassingame, John W. “Status and Social Structure in the Slave Community: Evidence from New Sources,” in Owens, ed., Perspectives and Irony, pp. 137-51. Reprinted in Miller, ed., Afro-American Slaves, pp. 109-22. 2317. Blassingame, John W. “Using the Testimony of Ex-Slaves: Approaches and Problems,” Journal of Southern History, 41, 4 (1975), pp. 473-92. Reprinted as an appendix in Gilmore, ed., Revisiting Blassingame’s The Slave Community, pp. 169-94; also in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (37-56). 2318. Blassingame, John W., ed. Slave Testimony: Two Centuries of Letters, Interviews, and Autobiographies. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1977. 2319. Bonner, James C. “Profile of a Late Antebellum Community,” American Historical Review, 49, 4 (1944), pp. 663-80. Reprinted in Miller and Genovese, eds., Plantation Town, and County, pp. 29-49. 2320. *Braley, Chad. “Ceramics and Status: Planter, Slave, and Po’ White Sites at Kings Bay, Georgia” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, New Orleans, 1981.) 171 2321. Brewer, James H. The Confederate Negro: Virginia’s Craftsmen and Military Laborers, 1861-1865. Durham, N. C.: Duke University Press, 1969. Excerpt reprinted in Haynes, ed., Blacks in White America Before 1865, pp. 490-503. 2322. Brockington, Paul, Michael Scardaville, Patrick H. Garrow, David Singer, Linda France, and Cheryl Holt. Rural Settlement in the Charleston Bay Area: Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Sites in the Mark Clark Expressway Corridor. Atlanta: Garrow & Associates, 1985. (Prepared for South Carolina Department of Highways and Public Transportation) 2323. *Brooks, Richard, and Glen T. Hanson. “The Ashley Plantation: Southern Access to the Nation’s Economic Network” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Savannah, 1987). 2324. *Brown, Kenneth L. “From Slavery to Wage Labor Tenancy” (Unpublished paper, Conference on “Digging the Afro-American Past: Archaeology and the Black Experience,” University of Mississippi, 17-20 May 1989). 2325. Bryant, Jonathan M. “‘My Soul An’t Yours, Mas’r”: The Records of the African Church at Penfield [Georgia],” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 75, 2 (1991), pp. 401-12. 2326. Burnham, Dorothy. “Children of the Slave Community in the United States,” Freedomways, 19, 2 (1979), pp. 75-81. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (1-7). 2327. *Burrows, Edward F. “The Literary Education of Negroes in Ante-bellum Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia, with Special Reference to Regulatory and Prohibitive Laws” (MA thesis, Duke University, 1941). 2328. Burton, Orville Vernon. In My Father’s House are Many Mansions: Family and Community in Edgefield, South Carolina. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1985. 2329. Butlin, Noel G. Ante-bellum Slavery - A Critique of a Debate. Canberra: Australian National University, 1971. 2330. Butts, Donald Cleveland. “A Challenge to Planter Rule: The Controversy Over the Ad Valorem Taxation of Slaves in North Carolina, 1858-1862” (PhD diss., Duke University, 1978). 2331. Butts, Donald Cleveland. “The ‘Irrepressible Conflict’: Slave Taxation and North Carolina’s Gubernatorial Election of 1860,” North Carolina Historical Review, 58, 1 (1981), pp. 44-66. 2332. Cade, John B. “Out of the Mouths of Ex-Slaves,” Journal of Negro History, 20, 3 (1935), pp. 294-337. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (58-101). 2333. Cairnes John E. “The Economic Basis of Slavery,” reprinted in Aitken, ed., Did Slavery Pay?, pp. 25-40. (From The Slave Power.) 2334. Campbell, John. “Cash, Culture, and Cotton: Slave Market Participation in the South Carolina Upcountry” (Paper presented to conference on “Cultivation and Culture: Labor and the Shaping of Slave Life in the Americas”, University of Maryland, 12-14 April 1989). 172 2335. Campbell, John [Douglas]. “The Gender Division of Labor, Slave Reproduction, and the Slave Family Economy on Southern Cotton Plantations, 1800-1865” (PhD diss., University of Minnesota, 1988). 2336. Carrillo, Richard F. Green Grove Plantation: Archaeological and Historical Research at the Kinlock Site (38CH109), Charleston County. Columbia: South Carolina Department of Highways and Public Transportation, 1980. 2337. Cassidy, Frederic G. “The Place of Gullah,” American Speech, 55, 1 (1980), pp. 316. 2338. Charles, Allan D. “Black-White Relations in an Antebellum Church in the Carolina Upcountry,” South Carolina Historical Magazine, 89, 4 (1988), pp. 218-26. 2339. Chester, S. H. “African Slavery as I Knew It in Southern Arkansas,” Tennessee Historical Magazine, 9, 3 (1925), pp. 178-84. 2340. Cimbala, Paul A. “Fortunate Bondsmen: Black ‘Musicianers’ and Their Role as an Antebellum Southern Plantation Slave Elite,” Southern Studies, 18, 3 (1979), pp. 291-303. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (1-13). 2341. Clark, Ernest J., Jr. “Aspects of the North Carolina Slave Code, 1715-1860,” North Carolina Historical Review, 39, 2 (1962), pp. 148-64. 2342. Clarke, T. Erskine. “An Experiment in Paternalism: Presbyterians and Slaves in Charleston, South Carolina,” Journal of Presbyterian History, 53, 3 (1975), pp. 223-38. 2343. Clinton, Catherine. “Fanny Kemble’s Journal: A Woman Confronts Slavery on a Georgia Plantation,” Frontiers, 9, 3 (1986), pp. 74-79. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (26-31). 2344. Cockrell, Thomas D. “Meadow Woods Plantation: A Study in Transition,” Journal of Mississippi History, 52, 4 (1990), pp. 301-23. 2345. Cody, Cheryll Ann. “Naming, Kinship, and Estate Dispersal: Notes on Slave Family Life on a South Carolina Plantation, 1786 to 1833,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 39, 1 (1982), pp. 192-211. Reprinted in Michael Gordon, ed., The American Family in Social-Historical Perspective (3rd ed.) (New York: St. Martins Press, 1983), pp. 440-58; also in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 1, pp. 241-60. 2346. *Cody, Cheryll Ann. “‘Painful Though It Might Be’, Inheritance Practices and Slave Families on the Ball Plantations” (Paper 86-3, Working Papers of the Social History Workshop, Department of History, University of Minnesota, 1986). 2347. *Cody, Cheryll Ann. “Patterns and Determinants of Slave Infant and Childhood Mortality in the South Carolina Low Country, 1800-1860” (Unpublished paper, Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association, Seattle, 1984). 2348. *Cody, Cheryll Ann. “Social Networks and the Slave Marriage Market: Finding a Mate on the Ball Plantations, 1810-1865 (Methodological Considerations)” (Unpublished paper, Fifth Sunbelt Social Network Conference, Palm Beach, Florida, 1985). (Also Organization of American Historians, Minneapolis, 1985). 173 2349. *Cody, Cheryll Ann. “Tacit Rules and Hidden Structures, Slave Naming Practices on the Ball Family Plantations” (Unpublished paper, Department of History, University of California - Berkeley, 1984) 2350. Cody, Cheryll Ann. “There was No ‘Absalom’ on the Ball Plantations, SlaveNaming Practices in the South Carolina Low Country, 1720-1865,” American Historical Review, 92, 3 (1987), pp. 563-96. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (15-48). 2351. Combes, John D. ““Ethnography, Archaeology and Burial Practices among Coastal South Carolina Blacks,” Conference on Historic Site Archaeology Papers, 7 (1972), pp. 5261. 2352. Conrad, Alfred H., Douglas [F.] Dowd, Stanley [L.] Engerman, Eli Ginzberg, Charles Kelso, John R. Meyer, Harry N. Scheiber, and Richard Sutch. “Slavery as an Obstacle to Economic Growth in the United States: A Panel Discussion,” Journal of Economic History, 27, 4 (1967), pp. 518-60. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (28-70); also in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (28-70). Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-48. Dowd reprinted in Aitken, ed., Did Slavery Pay?, pp. 287-95. 2353. Conrad, Alfred H., and John R. Meyer. “The Economics of Slavery in the Ante Bellum South,” Journal of Political Economy, 66, 2 (1958), pp. 95-130. Reprinted in Conrad and Meyer, eds., The Economics of Slavery and Other Studies in Econometric History (Chicago: Aldine, 1964), pp. 43-84; also in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (103-38). 2354. Cordillot, Michel. “Société esclavagiste et mouvement ouvrier: le Sud des EtatsUnis avant la Guerre de Sécession,” Cahiers d’histoire de l’Institut de Recherches Marxistes, 20 (1985), pp. 111-32. 2355. Cornelius, Janet Duitsman. “God’s Schoolmasters: Southern Evangelists to the Slaves, 1830-1860” (PhD diss., University of Illinois, 1977). 2356. Cornelius, Janet Duitsman. “Slave Marriages in a Georgia Congregation,” in Orville Vernon Burton and Robert C. McMath, Jr., eds., Class, Conflict, and Consensus: Antebellum Southern Community Studies (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1982), pp. 12845. 2357. Cornelius, Janet [Duitsman]. “‘We Slipped and Learned to Read’: Slave Accounts of the Literacy Process, 1830-1865,” Phylon, 44, 3 (1983), pp. 171-86. 2358. Cornelius, Janet Duitsman. “When I can Read my Title Clear”: Literacy, Slavery, and Religion in the Antebellum South. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1991. 2359. Cottrol, Robert J. “Liberalism and Paternalism: Ideology, Economic Interest and the Business Law of Slavery,” American Journal of Legal History, 31, 4 (1987), pp. 359-73. 2360. Coulter, E. Merton. “Slavery and Freedom in Athens, Georgia, 1860-66,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 49, 3 (1965), pp. 264-93. 174 Reprinted in Miller and Genovese, eds., Plantation, Town, and County, pp. 337-64. 2361. Coyner, Martin Boyd, Jr. “John Hartwell Cocke of Bremo: Agriculture and Slavery in the Ante-Bellum South” (PhD diss., University of Virginia, 1961). 2362. Creel, Margaret Washington. “Antebellum Religion among the Gullahs: A Study of Slave Conversion and Religious Culture in the South Carolina Sea Islands” (PhD diss., University of California, Davis, 1980). 2363. *Creel, Margaret Washington. “Cultural Transmission and Female Diviners in the Gullah of Slave Society” (Paper presented to Southern Historical Association, Lexington, Kentucky, 1989). 2364. Creel, Margaret Washington. A Peculiar People: Slave Religion and Community-Culture among the Gullahs. New York: New York University Press, 1988. 2365. Creel, Margaret Washington, and Dennis C. Smith. “Challenging Perspectives on Slave Life in the Ante-Bellum South,” New Scholar, 5, 2 (1975), pp. 335-50. 2366. Cresto, Kathleen M. “Negro Contributions to the Confederacy,” Negro History Bulletin, 44, 2 (1981), pp. 30-43. 2367. Cresto, Kathleen M. “Sherman and Slavery,” Civil War Times Illustrated, 17, 7 (1978), pp. 12-21. 2368. Cunningham, Constance. “The Sin of Omission: Black Women in Nineteenth Century American History,” Journal of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 33, 1 (1987), pp. 35-46. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 1, pp. 287-301. 2369. Currier, James T. “From Slavery to Freedom in Mississippi’s Legal System,” Journal of Negro History, 65, 2 (1980), pp. 112-25. 2370. Dalton, Karen C. Chambers. “‘The Alphabet is an Abolitionist’: Literacy and African Americans in the Emancipation Era,” The Massachusetts Review, 32, 4 (1991), pp. 545-79. 2371. Davis, Angela. “Reflections on the Black Woman’s Role in the Community of Slaves,” Black Scholar, 3, 9 (1971), pp. 2-15. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 1, pp. 287-301. 2372. Davis, Edwin Adams, and William Ransom Hogan. The Barber of Natchez. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1954. 2373. Dennard, David Charles. “Religion in the Quarters: A Study of Slave Preachers in the Antebellum South, 1800-1860” (PhD diss., Northwestern University, 1983). 2374. Dew, Charles B. “Disciplining Slave Ironworkers in the Antebellum South: Coercion, Conciliation, and Accommodation,” American Historical Review, 79, 2 (1974), pp. 393-418. Reprinted in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 63-85; also in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (71-96). 2375. Dew, Charles B. “Slavery and Technology in the Antebellum Southern Iron Industry: The Case of Buffalo Forge,” in Ronald L. Numbers and Todd L. Savitt, eds., 175 Science and Medicine in the Old South (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989), pp. 107-26. 2376. Dew, Charles B., ed. Slavery in Ante-Bellum Southern Industries (Series A: Selections from the Duke University Library). Microfilm. Bethesda, Md.: University Publications of America, 1990. 2377. Diedrich, Maria. Ausbruch aus der Knechtschaft: das amerikanische Slave Narrative zwischen Unabhängigkeitserklärung und Bürgerkrieg. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 1986. 2378. Diedrich, Maria. “‘My Love is Black as Yours is Fair’: Premarital Love and Sexuality in the Antebellum Slave Narrative,” Phylon, 47, 3 (1987), pp. 32-41. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (32-41). 2379. Dowd, Douglas F. “The Economics of Slavery in the Ante Bellum South: A Comment,” Journal of Political Economy, 66, 5 (1958), pp. 440-42. With reply by Alfred H. Conrad and John R. Meyer, pp. 442-43. 2380. Doyon, Roy R., and Thomas W. Hodler. “Secessionist Sentiment and Slavery: A Geographic Analysis,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 73, 2 (1989), pp. 323-48. 2381. Durden, Robert F. “Georgia’s Blacks and their Masters in the Civil War,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 69, 3 (1985), pp. 355-64. 2382. Durden, Robert F. The Gray and the Black: The Confederate Debate on Emancipation. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1972. 2383. Eblen, Jack E. “Growth of the Black Population in Ante Bellum America, 18201860,” Population Studies, 26, 2 (1972), pp. 273-89. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery, pp. (35-51). 2384. Eby, Cecil B. “Classical Names among Southern Negro Slaves,” American Speech, 36, 2 (1961), pp. 140-41. 2385. Edwards, John C. “Slave Justice in Four Middle Georgia Counties,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 57, 2 (1973), pp. 256-73. 2386. Ehrenhard, John E., and Mary R. Bullard. Stafford Plantation, Cumberland Island National Seashore, Georgia: Archaeological Investigations of a Slave Cabin. Tallahassee: Southeast Archaeological Center, National Park Service, 1981. 2387. Engerman, Stanley L. “The Effects of Slavery Upon the Southern Economy: A Review of the Recent Debate,” Explorations in Entrepreneurial History, 2nd ser., 4, 2 (1967), pp. 71-97. Reprinted in Aitken, ed., Did Slavery Pay?, pp. 295-327; also in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (155-81). 2388. Engerman, Stanley L. “Marxist Economic Studies of the Slave South,” Marxist Perspectives, 1, 1 (1978), pp. 148-64. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (156-72). 2389. Engerman, Stanley L. “Reconsidering The Slave Community,” in Gilmore, ed., Revisiting Blassingame’s The Slave Community, pp. 96-110. 176 2390. Engerman, Stanley L. “The Southern Slave Economy,” in Owens, ed., Perspectives and Irony, pp. 71-101. 2391. Escott, Paul D. “The Context of Freedom: Georgia’s Slaves During the Civil War,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 58, 1 (1974), pp. 79-104. 2392. Farnham, Christie. “Sapphire? The Issue of Dominance in the Slave Family, 1830-1865,” in Carole Groneman and Mary Beth Norton, eds., ‘To Toil the Livelong Day’: America’s Women at Work, 1780-1980 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1987), pp. 68-83. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 2, pp. 369-84. 2393. Faust, Drew Gilpin. “Culture, Conflict and Community: The Meaning of Power on an Ante-Bellum Plantation,” Journal of Social History, 14, 1 (1980), pp. 83-97. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (89-103). 2394. Faust, Drew Gilpin, ed. The Ideology of Slavery: Proslavery Thought in the Antebellum South, 1830-1860. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1981. 2395. Fede, Andrew. “Legal Protection for Slave Buyers in the U.S. South: A Caveat Concerning Caveat Emptor,” American Journal of Legal History, 31, 4 (1987), pp. 322-58. 2396. Fenn, Elizabeth A. “‘A Perfect Equality Seemed to Reign’: Slave Society and Jonkonnu,” North Carolina Historical Review, 65, 2 (1988), pp. 127-53. 2397. Ferguson, Leland G. “Afro-American Slavery and the ‘Invisible’ Archaeological Record of South Carolina,” Conference on Historic Site Archaeology Papers, 14 (1982), pp. 13-19. 2398. Field, Elizabeth Burnet. “Elasticities of Complementarity and Returns to Scale in Antebellum Cotton Agriculture” (PhD diss., Duke University, 1985). 2399. Finkelman, Paul. “Slaves as Fellow Servants: Ideology, Law, and Industrialization,” American Journal of Legal History, 31, 4 (1987), pp. 269-305. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (89-125). 2400. Finkelman, Paul, ed. State Slavery Statutes: Insights into Slavery and Society in the Antebellum South (microfiche). Frederick, Md.: University Publications of America, 1989. 2401. Fisher, Walter. “Physicians and Slavery in the Antebellum Southern Medical Journal,” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 23, 1 (1968), pp. 36-49. Reprinted in Meier and Rudwick, eds., Making of Black America, pp. 153-64; also in Finkelman, ed., Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery, pp. (52-65). 2402. Flanders, Ralph B. “The Free Negro in Ante-bellum Georgia,” North Carolina Historical Review, 9, 2 (1932), pp. 250-72. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Free Blacks in a Slave Society, pp. (40-62). 2403. Flanders, Ralph B. Plantation Slavery in Georgia. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1933. 2404. Flanders, Ralph B. “Two Plantations and a County of Antebellum Georgia,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 12, 1 (1928), pp. 1-37. Reprinted in Miller and Genovese, eds., Plantation, Town, and County, pp. 225-43. 177 2405. Flanigan, Daniel J. The Criminal Law of Slavery and Freedom, 1800-1868. New York: Garland, 1987. 2406. Flanigan, Daniel J. “Criminal Procedure in Slave Trials in the Antebellum South,” Journal of Southern History, 40, 4 (1974), pp. 537-64. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 191-218; also in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (127-54). 2407. Fogel, Robert W., and Stanley L. Engerman. “A Comparison of the Relative Efficiency of Slave and Free Agriculture in the United States during 1860,” Papers of the 5th International Congress of Economic History (Leningrad, 1970) (Moscow, 1976), vol. 7, pp. 14146. 2408. Fogel, Robert W., and Stanley L. Engerman. “Explaining the Relative Efficiency of Slave Agriculture in the Antebellum South,” American Economic Review, 67, 3 (1977), pp. 275-96. 2409. Fogel, Robert W., and Stanley L. Engerman. “Explaining the Relative Efficiency of Slave Agriculture in the Antebellum South: Reply,” American Economic Review, 70, 4 (1980), pp. 672-90. 2410. Fogel, Robert W., and Stanley L. Engerman. “Recent Findings in the Study of Slave Demography and Family Structure,” Sociology and Social Research, 63, 3 (1979), pp. 56689. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (104-27). 2411. Fogel, Robert W[illiam], and Stanley L. Engerman. “Toward an Explanation for the Persistence of the Myth of Black Incompetence,” in Smith and Inscoe, eds. Ulrich Bonnell Phillips, pp. 207-14. 2412. Foust, James D., and Dale E. Swan. “Productivity and Profitability of Antebellum Slave Labor: A Micro-Approach,” Agricultural History, 44, 1 (1970), pp. 39-62. 2413. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. “A Political Division of Labor?: Slave Women’s Struggles Against Slavery in the Antebellum South” (Paper read to the Southern Historical Association, Houston, 1985). 2414. Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. Within the Plantation Household: Black and White Women of the Old South. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1988. 2415. Franklin, John Hope. “The Enslavement of Free Negroes in North Carolina,” Journal of Negro History, 29, 4 (1944), pp. 401-28. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Southern Slavery at the State and Local Level, pp. (41-68). 2416. Franklin, John Hope. “The Free Negro in the Economic Life of Ante-Bellum North Carolina,” North Carolina Historical Review, 19, 3 (1942), pp. 239-59; 19, 4 (1942), pp. 359-75. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Free Blacks in a Slave Society, pp. (63-101). Also BobbsMerrill Reprint no. BC-89. 2417. Franklin, John Hope. “Slaves Virtually Free in Ante-Bellum North Carolina,” Journal of Negro History, 28, 3 (1943), pp. 284-310. 178 Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Free Blacks in a Slave Society, pp. (134-60). Also BobbsMerrill Reprint no. BC-88. 2418. Fredrickson, George M. “Masters and Mudsills: The Role of Race in the Planter Ideology of South Carolina,” South Atlantic Urban Studies, 2 (1978), pp. 34-48. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (148-62). 2419. Freehling, William W. “Denmark Vesey’s Peculiar Reality,” in Robert H. Abzug and Stephen E. Maizlish, eds., New Perspectives on Slavery in America: Essays in Honor of Kenneth M. Stampp (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1986), pp. 25-47. 2420. Frey, Sylvia R. “Review Essay: Between Two Wars: The Rise and Fall of Chattel Slavery in Georgia (Smith, Slavery and Rice Culture in Low Country Georgia, and Mohr, On the Threshold of Freedom),” Slavery and Abolition, 8, 2 (1987), pp. 216-25. 2421. Gallay, Alan. “The Origins of Slaveholders’ Paternalism: George Whitefield, the Bryan Family, and the Great Awakening in the South,” Journal of Southern History, 53, 3 (1987), pp. 369-94. 2422. Gara, Larry. “Slavery and the Slave Power: A Crucial Distinction,” Civil War History, 15, 1 (1969), pp. 5-18. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (163-76). 2423. Gara, Larry. “Some Lessons from the Underground Railroad,” in Gene D. Lewis, ed., New Historical Perspectives: Essays on the Black Experience in Antebellum America (Cincinnati: Friends of Harriet Beecher Stowe House and Citizen’s Committee on Youth, 1984), pp. 37-58. 2424. *Garrow, Patrick W. “Archaeological Investigation of Two Slave Quarters Sites in Berkeley County, South Carolina” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, New Orleans, 1981). 2425. *Garrow, Patrick W., and Thomas R. Wheaton. “Colonoware Ceramics: The Evidence from Yaughan and Curriboo Plantations,” in Albert C. Goodyear and Glen T. Hanson, eds., Studies in South Carolina Archaeology: Essays in Honor of Robert L. Stephenson (Columbia: South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, 1989), pp. 175-184. 2426. *Garlid, Jennifer. “Stagville Field School in Historical Archaeology: A Nineteenth Century Slave Cabin” (Unpublished report on file, North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, Division of Archives and History, Raleigh, 1979). 2427. Genovese, Eugene D. “Black Plantation Preachers in the Slave South,” Louisiana Studies, 11, 3 (1972), pp. 188-214. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (136-62). 2428. Genovese, Eugene D. “Cotton, Slavery and Soil Exhaustion in the Old South,” Cotton History Review, 2, 1 (1961), pp. 3-17. 2429. Genovese, Eugene D. “Livestock in the Slave Economy of the Old South - A Revised View,” Agricultural History, 36, 3 (1962), pp. 143-49. 2430. Genovese, Eugene D. “The Low Productivity of Southern Slave Labor: Causes and Effects,” Civil War History, 9, 4 (1963), pp. 365-82. 179 Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (187-204). 2431. Genovese, Eugene D. “The Medical and Insurance Costs of Slaveholding in the Cotton Belt,” Journal of Negro History, 45, 3 (1960), pp. 141-55. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery, pp. (67-81). 2432. Genovese, Eugene D. “The Origins of Slavery Expansionism,” in Brown, ed., Slavery in American Society, pp. 98-106. (Reprinted from Political Economy of Slavery, pp. 24351, 256-70.) 2433. Genovese, Eugene D. The Political Economy of Slavery: Studies in the Economy and Society of the Slave South. New York: Pantheon, 1965. Translated as Economie politique de l’esclavage: essais sur l’économie et la société du sud esclavagiste (trans. Nicole Barbier) (Paris: Maspéro, 1968); reprinted 1979. Also as Economía política de la esclavitud: estudios sobre la economía y la sociedad en el Sur esclavista (trans. Melinton Bustamente Ortiz) (Barcelona: Ediciones Península, 1970). *(Also translated?) as Esclavitud y capitalismo (trans. Castellano de Angel Abad) (Esplugas de Llobregat: Ediciones Ariel, 1971). Reprinted with new introduction. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1989. 2434. Genovese, Eugene D. “The Significance of the Slave Plantation for Southern Economic Development,” Journal of Southern History, 28, 4 (1962), pp. 422-37. Reprinted in Aitken, ed., Did Slavery Pay?, pp. 251-70; also in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (206-21). 2435. Genovese, Eugene D. “The Slave South: An Interpretation,” Science and Society, 25, 4 (1961), pp. 320-37. Reprinted in Weinstein and Gatell, eds., American Negro Slavery (2nd ed.), pp. 262-78; also in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (250-67). 2436. Genovese, Eugene D. The Slaveholders’ Dilemma: Freedom and Progress in Southern Conservative Thought, 1820-1860. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1992. 2437. Genovese, Eugene D. “Ulrich Bonnell Phillips as an Economic Historian,” in Smith and Inscoe, eds. Ulrich Bonnell Phillips, pp. 203-06. 2438. Genovese, Eugene D. “Yeoman Farmers in a Slaveholders’ Democracy,” Agricultural History, 49, 2 (1975), pp. 331-42. Reprinted in Political Economy of Slavery; revised in Fox-Genovese and Genovese, Fruits of Merchant Capital, pp. 249-64; also in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (193-204). 2439. Genovese, Eugene D., and Elizabeth Fox-Genovese. “The Religious Ideals of Southern Slave Society,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 70, 1 (1986), pp. 1-16. 180 2440. Genovese, Eugene D., and Elizabeth Fox-Genovese. “Slavery, Economic Development, and the Law: The Dilemma of the Southern Political Economists, 18001860,” Washington and Lee Law Review, 41, 1 (1984), pp. 1-29. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 244-72. 2441. Gibbs, Tyson, Kathleen Cargill, Leslie Sue Lieberman, and Elizabeth J. Reitz. “Nutrition in a Slave Population: An Anthropological Examination,” Medical Anthropology, 4, 2 (1980), pp. 175-262. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery, pp. (83-170). 2442. Goldin, Claudia D. “The Economics of Emancipation,” Journal of Economic History, 33, 1 (1973), pp. 66-85. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (222-41). 2443. Govan, Thomas P. “Comment on ‘The Economics of American Negro Slavery’, by Robert Evans, Jr.,” in National Bureau of Economic Research, Aspects of Labor Economics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1962), pp. 243-46. 2444. Govan, Thomas P. “Was Plantation Slavery Profitable?” Journal of Southern History, 8, 4 (1942), pp. 513-35. Reprinted in Aitken, ed., Did Slavery Pay?, pp. 107-31. Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-110. 2445. Gray, Lewis C. “Economic Efficiency and Competitive Advantages of Negro Slavery under the Plantation System,” reprinted in Aitken, ed., Did Slavery Pay?, pp. 107-31. (From History of Agriculture in the Southern United States to 1860) 2446. Green, Rodney D. “Quantitative Sources for Studying Urban Industrial Slavery in the Antebellum US South,” Immigrants and Minorities, 5, 3 (1986), pp. 305-15. 2447. Greenberg, Kenneth S. “Black Women and White Men in the Antebellum South (review essay: White, ‘Ar’n’t I a Woman?’),” Reviews in American History, 15, 2 (1987), pp. 25258. 2448. Greenberg, Kenneth S. “Revolutionary Ideology and the Proslavery Argument: The Abolition of Slavery in Antebellum South Carolina,” Journal of Southern History, 42, 3 (1976), pp. 365-84. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (205-24). 2449. Gutman, Herbert G. “Family and Kinship Groupings among the Enslaved AfroAmericans on the South Carolina Good Hope Plantation: 1760-1860,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 242-58. Translated as “Famille et groupe de parenté chez les Afro-Américaines en esclavage dans la plantation de Good Hope, Caroline du Sud, 1760-1860,” in Mintz, ed., Esclave = facteur de production, pp. 141-66. 2450. Gwin, Minrose C. “Green-Eyed Monsters of the Slavocracy: Jealous Mistresses in Two Slave Narratives,” in Marjorie Pryse and Hortense J. Spillers, eds., Conjuring: Black 181 Women, Fiction, and Literary Tradition (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1985), pp. 3952. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 2, pp. 557-72. 2451. Haller, John S., Jr. “The Negro and the Southern Physician: A Study of Medical and Racial Attitudes,” Medical History, 16 (1972), pp. 238-53. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery, pp. (172-87). 2452. Halasz, Nicholas. The Rattling Chains: Slave Unrest and Revolt in the Antebellum South. New York: D. McKay Co., 1966. 2453. Harding, Vincent. “Religion and Resistance among Antebellum Negroes, 18001860,” in Meier and Rudwick, eds., Making of Black America, pp. 179-97. 2454. Hardy, James D., Jr., and Robert B. Robinson. “A Peculiarity of the Peculiar Institution: An Alabama Case,” Alabama Review, 45, 1 (1992), pp. 18-25. 2455. Harper, C. W. “Black Aristocrats: Domestic Servants on the Antebellum Plantation,” Phylon, 46, 2 (1985), pp. 123-35. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (131-43). 2456. Harper, C. W. “House Servants and Field Hands: Fragmentation in the Ante Bellum Slave Community,” North Carolina Historical Review, 55, 1 (1978), pp. 42-59. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (144-61). 2457. Harris, J. William. “The Organization of Work on a Yeoman Slaveholder’s Farm,” Agricultural History, 64, 1 (1990), pp. 39-52. 2458. Harris, J. William. Plain Folk and Gentry in a Slave Society: White Liberty and Black Slavery in Augusta’s Hinterlands. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1985. 2459. Harris, J. William. “Portrait of a Small Slaveholder: The Journal of Benton Miller,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 74, 1 (1990), pp. 1-19. 2460. Haskell, Thomas L. “Explaining the Relative Efficiency of Slave Agriculture in the Ante-Bellum South: A Reply to Fogel-Engerman,” American Economic Review, 69, 1 (1979), pp. 206-07. 2461. Hawes, Ruth B. “Slavery in Mississippi,” Sewanee Review, 21, 2 (1913), pp. 223-34. 2462. Hayden, J. Carleton. “Conversion and Control: Dilemma of Episcopalians in Providing for the Religious Instruction of Slaves, Charleston, South Carolina, 1845-1860,” Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church, 40, 2 (1971), pp. 143-71. 2463. Henderson, William C. “The Slave Court System in Spartanburg County,” Proceedings of the South Carolina Historical Association (1976), pp. 24-38. 2464. Henderson, William C. “Spartan Slaves: A Documentary Account of Blacks on Trial in Spartanburg, South Carolina, 1830 to 1865” (PhD diss., Northwestern University, 1978). 2465. Henry, Howell M. The Police Control of the Slave in South Carolina. Emory, Virginia, 1914. 182 2466. Hewett, David Gerald. “Slavery in the Old South: The British Travelers’ Image, 1825-1860” (PhD diss., Florida State University, 1968). 2467. Hindus, Michael S. “Black Justice Under White Law: Criminal Prosecutions of Blacks in Antebellum South Carolina,” Journal of American History, 63, 3 (1976), pp. 575-99. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (185-209). 2468. Hofstadter, Richard. “U. B. Phillips and the Plantation Legend,” Journal of Negro History, 29, 2 (1944), pp. 109-24. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (297-312); also in Smith and Inscoe, eds., Ulrich Bonnell Phillips, pp. 185-98. 2469. *Howson, Jean E. “The Archaeology of Plantation Slavery” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Northeast Anthropological Association, Amherst, 1987). 2470. *Howson, Jean E[llen]. “English Goods, Slave Culture” (Master’s seminar paper, New York University, 1988). 2471. *Howson, Jean E. “The Slave Village at Galways Plantation” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Savannah, 1987). 2472. *Hudson, L. “The ‘Average Truth’: The Slave Family in South Carolina, 18201860” (PhD thesis, Keele University, 1990). 2473. Hunter, Frances L. “Slave Society on the Southern Plantation,” Journal of Negro History, 7, 1 (1922), pp. 1-10. 2474. Hurmence, Belinda, ed. Before Freedom: 48 Oral Histories of Former North and South Carolina Slaves. New York: Penguin Books, 1989. 2475. Hurmence, Belinda, ed. Before Freedom, When I Just Can Remember: Twenty-Seven Oral Histories of Former South Carolina Slaves. Winston-Salem: J. F. Blair, 1989. 2476. Hurmence, Belinda, ed. My Folks Don’t Want Me to Talk About Slavery: Twenty-One Oral Histories of Former North Carolina Slaves. Winston-Salem: J. F. Blair, 1984. 2477. Inscoe, John C. “Carolina Slave Names: An Index to Acculturation,” Journal of Southern History, 49, 4 (1983), pp. 527-54. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (163-90). 2478. Inscoe, John C. “South Carolina Blacks as Slaves and Slaveholders: A Review Essay (Joyner, Down by the Riverside, Johnson and Roark, Black Masters, and Johnson and Roark, eds., No Chariot Let Down),” Maryland Historian, 16, 1 (1985), pp. 57-62. 2479. Jackson, Harvey H. “American Slavery, American Freedom, and the Revolution in the Lower South: The Case of Lachlan McIntosh,” Southern Studies, 19, 1 (1980), pp. 8193. 2480. Jackson, James Conroy. “The Religious Education of the Negro in South Carolina Prior to 1850,” Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church, 36, 1 (1967), pp. 35-61. 183 2481. Jackson, Luther P. “Religious Instruction of Negroes, 1830-1860, with Special Reference to South Carolina,” Journal of Negro History, 15, 1 (1930), pp. 72-114. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (190-232). 2482. Jackson, Shirley M. “Black Slave Drivers in the Southern United States” (PhD diss., Bowling Green State University, 1977). 2483. James, Larry M. “Biracial Fellowship in Antebellum Baptist Churches,” in Boles, ed., Masters and Slaves in the House of the Lord, pp. 37-58. 2484. January, Alan F. “The South Carolina Association: An Agency for Race Control in Antebellum Charleston,” South Carolina Historical Magazine, 78, 3 (1977), pp. 191-201. 2485. Jentz, John. “A Note on Genovese’s Account of the Slaves’ Religion,” Civil War History, 23, 2 (1977), pp. 161-69. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (307-15). 2486. Jervey, Edward D., and C. Harold Huber. “The Creole Affair,” Journal of Negro History, 65, 3 (1980), pp. 195-211. 2487. Johannsen, Robert W. “A Nation on the Brink (review essay: Stampp, America in 1857),” Reviews in American History, 19, 4 (1991), pp. 499-504. 2488. Johnson, Kenneth R. “Slavery and Racism in Florence, Alabama, 1841-1862,” Civil War History, 27, 2 (1981), pp. 155-71. 2489. Johnson, Michael P. “Freedom Then (review essay: Berlin, et al., eds., Freedom: A Documentary History),” Reviews in American History, 15, 2 (1987), pp. 259-64. 2490. Johnson, Michael P. “Planters and Patriarchy: Charleston, 1800-1860,” Journal of Southern History, 46, 1 (1980), pp. 45-72. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (250-78). 2491. Johnson, Michael P. “Runaway Slaves and the Slave Communities in South Carolina, 1799 to 1830,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 38, 3 (1981), pp. 418-41. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp.(230-53). 2492. Johnson, Michael P. “Slave Folklore on the Waccaman Neck: Antebellum Black Culture in the South Carolina Low Country” (PhD diss., University of Pennsylvania, 1977). 2493. Johnson, Michael P. “Work, Culture, and the Slave Community: Slave Occupations in the Cotton Belt in 1860,” Labor History, 27, 3 (1986), pp. 325-55. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (191-221). 2494. Johnson, Whittington B. “Free Blacks in Antebellum Savannah: An Economic Profile,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 64, 4 (1980), pp. 418-31. 2495. Jones, Archer, and Robert J. Carlsson. “Slavery and Saving,” American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 30, 2 (1971), pp. 171-77. 2496. Jones, Bobby Frank. “A Cultural Middle Passage: Slave Marriage and Family in the Ante-Bellum South” (PhD diss., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1965). 184 2497. Jones, Howard. “The Peculiar Institution and National Honor: The Case of the Creole Slave Revolt,” Civil War History, 21, 1 (1975), pp. 28-50. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (280-302). 2498. Jones, Norrece T[homas], Jr. “Control Mechanisms in South Carolina Slave Society, 1800-1865” (PhD diss., Northwestern University, 1981). 2499. Jones, Norrece T., Jr. Born a Child of Freedom, Yet a Slave: Mechanisms of Control and Strategies of Resistance in Antebellum South Carolina. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1989. 2500. Jones, Norrece T., Jr. “Slave Religion in South Carolina: A Heaven in Hell?” Southern Studies, n.s. 1, 1 (1990), pp. 5-32. 2501. Joyner, Charles W. “The Creolization of Slave Folklife: All Saints Parish, South Carolina, as a Test Case,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 6, 2 (1979), pp. 435-53. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (231-49); also in Miller, ed., Afro-American Slaves, pp. 123-34. 2502. Joyner, Charles W. Down by the Riverside: A South Carolina Slave Community. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1984. 2503. Joyner, Charles W. “History as Ritual: Rites of Power and Resistance on the Slave Plantation,” Australasian Journal of American Studies, 5, 1 (1986), pp. 1-9. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (233-40). 2504. Joyner, Charles W. “Soul Food and the Sambo Stereotype: Foodlore from the Slave Narrative Collection,” Keystone Folklore Quarterly, 16, 4 (1971), pp. 171-78. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Medicine, Nutrition, Demography, and Slavery, pp. (189-96). 2505. Joyner, Charles W. “The Trickster and the Fool: Folktales and Identity among Southern Plantation Slaves,” Plantation Society in the Americas, 2, 2 (1986), pp. 149-56. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (233-40). 2506. Katz, Maude White. “The Negro Woman and the Law,” Freedomways, 2, 3 (1962), pp. 278-86. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women’s History, vol. 1, pp. 83-93. 2507. Katz, Maude White. “She Who Would be Free - Resistance,” Freedomways, 2, 1 (1962), pp. 60-70. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women’s History, vol. 1, pp. 319-29. 2508. Kerr, Norwood Alan. “The Mississippi Colonization Society (1831-1860),” Journal of Mississippi History, 43, 1 (1981), pp. 1-30. 2509. Killion, Ronald G., and Charles Waller, comps. Slavery Time When I was Chillun Down on Marster’s Plantation: Interviews with Georgia Slaves. Savannah: Beehive Press, 1973. 2510. Kleinman, Max L. “The Denmark Vesey Conspiracy,” Negro History Bulletin, 37, 2 (1974), pp. 225-29. 185 2511. Koger, Larry. Black Slaveowners: Free Black Slave Masters in South Carolina, 1790-1860. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 1985. 2512. Kolchin, Peter. “American Historians and Antebellum Southern Slavery,” in William J. Cooper, Jr., Michael F. Holt, and John McCardell, eds., A Master’s Due: Essays in Honor of David Herbert Donald (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1985), pp. 87111. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery and Historiography, pp. (313-37). Translated as “Die südstaatliche Sklaverei vor dem amerikanischen Bürgerkrieg und die Historiker: Zur Debatte 1959-1988 (trans. Svenja Goltermann and Andreas Lüking),” Geschichte und Gesellschaft, 16, 2 (1990), pp. 161-86. 2513. Kotlikoff, Laurence J., and Sebastian Pinera. “The Old South’s Stake in the InterRegional Movement of Slaves, 1850-1860,” Journal of Economic History, 37, 2 (1977), pp. 43450. 2514. Krüger-Charle, Michael. Modernisierung und Sklaverei: die Industrialisierungsdebatte im Alten Süden der USA 1840-1860. Münich: W. Fink, 1988. 2515. Labinjoh, Justin. “The Sexual Life of the Oppressed: An Examination of the Family Life of Ante-Bellum Slaves,” Phylon, 35, 4 (1974), pp. 375-97. 2516. Lale, Max S., and Randolph B. Campbell, eds. “The Plantation Journal of John B. Webster, February 17, 1858 - November 5, 1859,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 84, 1 (1980), pp. 49-79. 2517. Lamp, Kimberly Dawn. “Empire for Slavery: Economic and Territorial Expansion in the American Gulf South, 1835-1860” (PhD diss., Harvard University, 1991). 2518. Lander, Ernest M., Jr. “Slave Labor in the South Carolina Cotton Mills,” Journal of Negro History, 38, 2 (1953), pp. 161-73. 2519. Lawrence-McIntyre, Charshee Charlotte. “Free Blacks: A Troublesome and Dangerous Population in Antebellum America” (PhD diss., State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1985). 2520. Lee, Anne S., and Everett S. Lee. “The Health of Slaves and the Health of Freedmen: A Savannah Study,” Phylon, 38, 2 (1977), pp. 170-80. 2521. Levine, Lawrence W. “‘Some Go Up and Some Go Down’: The Meaning of the Slave Trickster,” in Stanley Elkins and Eric McKitrick, eds., The Hofstadter Aegis: A Memorial (New York: Knopf, 1974), pp. 94-124. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (242-72). 2522. Lewis, Kenneth E. “Plantation Layout and Function in the South Carolina Lowcountry,” in Singleton, ed., Archaeology of Slavery, pp. 35-65. 2523. Lewis, Lynne G. “The Planter Class: The Archaeological Record at Drayton Hall,” in Singleton, ed., Archaeology of Slavery, pp. 121-40. 2524. Lichtenstein, Alex. “Industrial Slavery and the Tragedy of Robert Starobin,” Reviews in American History, 19, 4 (1991), pp. 604-17. 186 2525. Littlefield, Daniel F., Jr., and Mary Littlefield. “The Beams Family: Free Blacks in Indian Territory,” Journal of Negro History, 61, 1 (1976), pp. 17-35. 2526. Lofton, John M., Jr. Denmark Vesey’s Revolt: The Slave Plot that Lit a Fuse to Fort Sumter. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1983. Reprint and update of Insurrection in South Carolina: The Turbulent World of Denmark Vesey. 2527. Lofton, John M., Jr. Insurrection in South Carolina: The Turbulent World of Denmark Vesey. Yellow Springs, Ohio: Antioch Press, 1964. 2528. Luraghi, Raimondo. The Rise and Fall of the Plantation South. New York: New Viewpoints, 1978. 2529. McDaniel, Antonio. “The Power of Culture: A Review of the Idea of Africa’s Influence on Family Structure in Antebellum America,” Journal of Family History, 15, 2 (1990), pp. 225-38. 2530. *McDonnell, Lawrence T. “Money Knows no Master: Market Relations and the American Slave Community,” in Winfred B. Moore, Jr., Joseph F. Tripp, and Lyon G. Tyler, Jr., eds., Developing Dixie: Modernization in a Traditional Society (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1988), pp. 31-44. 2531. *McDonnell, Lawrence T. “The Whipping Post: Politics and Psychology of Punishment in the Slave South” (Unpublished paper, Social Science History Association, Toronto, Oct. 1984). 2532. McInerney, Daniel J. “‘A State of Commerce’: Market Power and Slave Power in Abolitionist Political Economy,” Civil War History, 37, 2 (1991), pp. 101-19. 2533. McKinney, Don S. “Moral Agency in Nineteenth Century Slave Culture: Perspectives on the Literature on the Slave Community,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 15, 1 (1991), pp. 24-31. 2534. McMichael, Philip. “The Crisis of the Southern Slaveholder Regime in the World Economy,” in Francisco O. Ramirez, ed., Rethinking the Nineteenth Century: Contradictions and Movements (New York: Greenwood Press, 1988), pp. 43-60. 2535. McMichael, Philip. “Slavery in Capitalism: The Rise and Demise of the U.S. Ante-Bellum Cotton Culture,” Theory and Society, 20, 3 (1991), pp. 321-49. With commentary by Sidney W. Mintz, pp. 383-92. 2536. Maddex, Jack P., Jr. “Proslavery Millennialism: Social Eschatology in Antebellum Southern Calvinism,” American Quarterly, 31, 1 (1979), pp. 46-62. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (472-88f). 2537. Mathew, William M. “Agricultural Adaptation and Race Control in the American South: The Failure of the Ruffin Reforms,” Slavery and Abolition, 7, 3 (1986), pp. 129-47. 2538. Mathew, William M. Edmund Ruffin and the Crisis of Slavery in the Old South: The Failure of Agricultural Reform. Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia Press, 1988. 187 2539. Mathews, Donald G. “Charles Colcock Jones and the Southern Evangelical Crusade to Form a Biracial Community,” Journal of Southern History, 41, 2 (1975), pp. 489510. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (489-510). 2540. Mathews, Donald G. “The Methodist Mission to the Slaves, 1829-1844,” Journal of American History, 51, 4 (1965), pp. 615-31. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (511-27). 2541. Mathews, Jean. “Race, Sex, and the Dimensions of Liberty in Antebellum America,” Journal of the Early Republic, 6, 3 (1986), pp. 275-91. 2542. Meeker, Edward. “Mortality Trends of Southern Blacks, 1850-1910: Some Preliminary Findings,” Explorations in Economic History, 13, 1 (1976), pp. 13-42. 2543. Mercer, P. M. “Tapping the Slave Narrative Collection for the Responses of Black South Carolinians to Emancipation and Reconstruction,” Australian Journal of Politics and History, 25, 3 (1979), pp. 358-74. 2544. Merritt, Carole Elaine. “Slave Family and Household Arrangements in Piedmont Georgia” (PhD diss., Emory University, 1986). 2545. Metzer, Jacob. “Institutional Change and Economic Analysis: Some Issues Related to American Slavery,” Louisiana Studies, 15, 4 (1976), pp. 321-43. 2546. Metzer, Jacob. “Rational Management, Modern Business Practices, and Economies of Scale in the Ante-Bellum Southern Plantations,” Explorations in Economic History, 2, 2 (1975), pp. 123-50. 2547. *Michie, James L. “Notes and Photographs Concerning the Friendfield Slave Cabins, Georgetown County, South Carolina” (Unpublished report on file, South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, Columbia, 1987). 2548. Michie, James L. Richmond Hill and Wachesaw: An Archaeological Study of Two Rice Plantations on the Waccamaw River, Georgetown County, South Carolina. Columbia: South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, 1987. 2549. Miller, Randall M. “The Fabric of Control: Slavery in Antebellum Southern Textile Mills,” Business History Review, 55, 4 (1981), pp. 471-90. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (301-20). 2550. Miller, Randall M. “The Failed Mission: The Catholic Church and Black Catholics in the Old South,” in Edward Magdol and Jon Wakelyn, eds., The Southern Common People: Studies in Nineteenth Century Social History (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1980), pp. 3754. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (529-46). 2551. Miller, Randall M. “The Golden Isles: Rice and Slaves Along the Georgia Coast,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 70, 1 (1986), pp. 81-96. 188 2552. Miller, Randall M. “The Man in the Middle: The Black Slave Driver,” American Heritage, 30, 6 (1979), pp. 40-49. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (273-81). 2553. Miller, Randall M. “Slaves and Southern Catholicism,” in Boles, ed., Masters and Slaves in the House of the Lord, pp. 127-52. 2554. Miller, Steven F. “Plantation Labor Organization and Slave Life on the Cotton Frontier: The Alabama-Mississippi Black Belt, 1815-1840,” in Berlin and Morgan, eds., Cultivation and Culture, pp. 155-70. 2555. Mills, Gary B. “Miscegenation and the Free Negro in Antebellum ‘Anglo’ Alabama: A Reexamination of Southern Race Relations,” Journal of American History, 68, 1 (1981), pp. 16-34. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Free Blacks in a Slave Society, pp. (332-50). 2556. Moes, John E. “The Absorption of Capital in Slave Labor in the Ante-Bellum South and Economic Growth,” American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 20, 5 (1960), pp. 535-41. 2557. Moes, John E. “Comment on ‘The Economics of American Negro Slavery’, by Robert Evans, Jr.,” in National Bureau of Economic Research, Aspects of Labor Economics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1962), pp. 247-56. 2558. 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New York: Farrar, Straus, 1964. 2724. *Wilson, Jack H., Jr. “Preliminary Results of Archaeology in the Slave Compound of Somerset Place State Historic Site, North Carolina” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Sacramento, 1986). 2725. *Wilson, Jack H., Jr. “Artifact Patterning in Slave Compound Assemblages from Somerset Place and Other Carolina Plantations” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Savannah, 1987). 2726. Woods, James M. “In the Eye of the Beholder: Slavery in the Travel Accounts of the Old South, 1790-1860,” Southern Studies, n.s. 1, 1 (1990), pp. 33-59. 2727. Wright, Gavin. The Political Economy of the Cotton South, Households, Markets, and Wealth in the Nineteenth Century. New York: Norton, 1978. 2728. Wright, Gavin. “Slavery and the Cotton Boom,” Explorations in Economic History, 12, 4 (1975), pp. 439-51. 2729. Wright, Michelle D. “African American Sisterhood: The Impact of the Female Slave Population on American Political Movements,” Western Journal of Black Studies, 15, 1 (1991), pp. 32-45. 2730. Wyatt-Brown, Bertram. “The Mask of Obedience: Male Slave Psychology in the Old South,” American Historical Review, 93, 5 (1988), pp. 1128-52. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., The Culture and Community of Slavery, pp. (378-402). 2731. Wyatt-Brown, Bertram. “Modernizing Southern Slavery: The Proslavery Argument Reinterpreted,” in J. Morgan Kousser and James M. McPherson, eds., Region, Race, and Reconstruction: Essays in Honor of C. Vann Woodward (New York: Oxford University Press, 1982), pp. 27-49. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Proslavery Thought, Ideology, and Politics, pp. (485-507). 2732. Yancy, Dorothy Cowser. “The Stuart Double Plow and Double Scraper: the Invention of a Slave,” Journal of Negro History, 69, 1 (1984), pp. 48-52. 201 2733. Yankovic, Donald J. “A Micro Study of the Cotton Plantation Economy of Dallas County, Alabama, Based on the Manuscript Census Returns of 1860” (PhD diss., University of Pittsburgh, 1972). 2734. Yanuck, Julius. “Thomas Ruffin and North Carolina Slave Law,” Journal of Southern History, 21, 4 (1955), pp. 456-75. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 684-703. 2735. Zepp, Thomas M. “Agricultural Labor in the American South, 1860-1870: An Analysis of Elasticity of Substitution and Change in Functional Shares” (PhD diss., University of Florida, 1971). 2736. Zierden, Martha A., Jeanne Calhoun, and Debi Hacker-Norton. Archdale Hall: Investigations of a Lowcountry Plantation. Charleston: The Charleston Museum, 1985. With contributions by Elizabeth J. Reitz and Michael Trinkley. (Archaeological Contributions 10) 6. Ante-Bellum Upper South 2737. Allen, Jeffrey Brooke. “The South’s ‘Northern Refutation’ of Slavery: Pre-1830 Kentucky as a Test Case,” Southern Studies, 20, 4 (1981), pp. 351-60. 2738. Bellamy, Donnie D. “The Education of Blacks in Missouri Prior to 1861,” Journal of Negro History, 59 (1974), pp. 143-57. 2739. Bellamy, Donnie D. “Free Blacks in Antebellum Missouri, 1820-1860,” Missouri Historical Review, 67, 2 (1973), pp. 198-226. 2740. Bellamy, Donnie D. “Slavery, Emancipation, and Racism in Missouri, 18501865” (PhD diss., University of Missouri, 1971). 2741. Campbell, John. “As ‘A Kind of Freeman’?: Slaves’ Market-Related Activities in the South Carolina Upcountry, 1800-1860,” in Berlin and Morgan, eds., The Slaves’ Economy, pp. 131-69. (Also Slavery and Abolition, 12, 1 [1991]) Republished in Berlin and Morgan, eds., Cultivation and Culture, pp. 243-74. 2742. Cimprich, John. “Slave Behavior during the Federal Occupation of Tennessee, 1862-1865,” Historian, 44, 3 (1982), pp. 335-46. 2743. Cimprich, John. “Slavery Amidst Civil War in Tennessee: The Death of an Institution” (PhD diss., Ohio State University, 1977). 2744. Cimprich, John. “Slavery’s End in East Tennessee,” East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, 52-53 (1980-81), pp. 78-88. 2745. Cimprich, John. Slavery’s End in Tennessee, 1861- 1865. University, Ala.: University of Alabama Press, 1985. 2746. Coleman, J. Winston, Jr. Slavery Times in Kentucky. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1940. 2747. Corlew, Robert E. “Some Aspects of Slavery in Dickson County,” Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 10, 3 (1951), pp. 224-48; 10, 4 (1951), pp. 344-65. Reprinted in Miller and Genovese, eds., Plantation, Town, and County, pp. 96-145. 202 2748. Crawford, Martin. “Slaveholding and Power in the New River Valley: Ashe County, North Carolina in 1860,” Proceedings of the New River Symposium, May 6-8, 1982, Beckley, West Virginia (National Park Service and West Virginia Department of Culture and History, 1983), pp. 30-35. 2749. Dew, Charles B. “Black Ironworkers and the Slave Insurrection Panic of 1856,” Journal of Southern History, 41, 3 (1975), pp. 321-38. 2750. Dorsett, Lyle Wesley. “Slaveholding in Jackson County, Missouri,” Missouri Historical Society Bulletin, 20, 1 (1963), pp. 25-37. Reprinted in Miller and Genovese, eds., Plantation, Town, and County, pp. 146-60. 2751. Duffner, Robert W. “Slavery in Missouri River Counties, 1820-1865” (PhD diss., University of Missouri, 1974). 2752. Eaton, Clement. “Slave-Hiring in the Upper South: A Step Toward Freedom,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 46, 4 (1960), pp. 663-78. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Southern Slavery at the State and Local Level, pp. (25-40). 2753. England, J. Merton. “The Free Negro in Ante-Bellum Tennessee,” Journal of Southern History, 9, 1 (1943), pp. 37-58. Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-73. 2754. Gatewood, Willard B., Jr. “Sunnyside: The Evolution of an Arkansas Plantation, 1848-1945,” Arkansas Historical Quarterly, 50, 1 (1991), pp. 5-29. 2755. Goodstein, Anita S. “Black History on the Nashville Frontier, 1780-1810,” Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 38, 4 (1979), pp. 401-20. 2756. Green, Barbara L. “Slave Labor at the Maramec Iron Works, 1828-1850,” Missouri Historical Review, 73, 2 (1979), pp. 150-64. 2757. Green, Barbara L. “The Slavery Debate in Missouri, 1831-1855” (PhD diss., University of Missouri, 1980). 2758. Harrison, Lowell H. “Recollections of Some Tennessee Slaves,” Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 33, 2 (1974), pp. 175-90. 2759. Harrold, Stanley. “Violence and Non-Violence in Kentucky Abolitionism,” Journal of Southern History, 57, 1 (1991), pp. 15-38. 2760. Hedrick, Charles Embury. “Social and Economic Aspects of Slavery in the Transmontane Prior to 1850” (PhD diss., George Peabody College for Teachers, 1927). 2761. Henry, Howell M. “The Slave Laws of Tennessee,” Tennessee Historical Magazine, 2, 3 (1916), pp. 175-203. 2762. Hickey, Donald R., ed. “Slavery and the Republican Experiment: A View from Western Virginia in 1806,” West Virginia History, 39, 2-3 (1978), pp. 236-40. 2763. Hoffschwelle, Mary S. “Women’s Sphere and the Creation of Female Community in the Antebellum South: Three Tennessee Slaveholding Women,” Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 50, 2 (1991), pp. 80-89. 203 2764. Howard, Victor B. Black Liberation in Kentucky: Emancipation and Freedom, 18621884. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1983. 2765. Howard, Victor B. “The Civil War in Kentucky: The Slave Claims his Freedom,” Journal of Negro History, 67, 3 (1982), pp. 245-56. 2766. Howard, Victor B. “Lincoln Slave Policy in Kentucky: A Study of Pragmatic Strategy,” Register of the Kentucky Historical Society, 80, 3 (1982), pp. 281-308. 2767. Howard, Victor B. “Robert J. Breckinridge and the Slavery Controversy in Kentucky in 1849,” Filson Club History Quarterly, 53, 4 (1979), pp. 328-43. 2768. Howington, Arthur F. “‘Not in the Condition of a Horse or an Ox’: Ford v. Ford, the Law of Testamentary Manumission, and the Tennessee Courts’ Recognition of Slave Humanity,” Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 34, 3 (1975), pp. 249-63. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 310-24. 2769. Howington, Arthur F. “‘A Property of Special and Peculiar Value’: The Tennessee Supreme Court and the Law of Manumission,” Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 44, 3 (1985), pp. 302-17. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (210-25). 2770. Howington, Arthur F. What Sayeth the Law: The Treatment of Slaves and Free Blacks in the State and Local Courts of Tennessee. New York: Garland, 1986. 2771. Hughes, John S. “Slavery and Emancipation in Lafayette County, Missouri” (MA thesis, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, 1978). 2772. Hunter, Lloyd A. “Slavery in St. Louis 1804-1860,” Bulletin of the Missouri Historical Society, 30, 4 (1974), pp. 233-65. 2773. Inscoe, John C. “Mountain Masters: Slaveholding in Western North Carolina,” North Carolina Historical Review, 61, 2 (1984), pp. 143-73. 2774. Inscoe, John C. Mountain Masters, Slavery and the Sectional Crisis in Western North Carolina. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1989. 2775. Inscoe, John C. “Olmsted in Appalachia: A Connecticut Yankee Encounters Slavery and Racism in the Southern Highlands,” Slavery and Abolition, 9, 2 (1988), pp. 17182. 2776. Inscoe, John C. “Slavery, Sectionalism, and Secession in Western North Carolina” (PhD diss., University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, 1985). 2777. Lack, Paul D. “An Urban Slave Community: Little Rock, 1831-1862,” Arkansas Historical Quarterly, 41, 3 (1982), pp. 258-87. 2778. Lovett, Bobby L. “The Negro’s Civil War in Tennessee,” Journal of Negro History, 61, 1 (1976), pp. 36-50. 2779. McDougle, Ivan Eugene. Slavery in Kentucky, 1792-1865. Lancaster, Pa.: New Era Printing Co., 1918. 204 2780. McGettigan, James William, Jr. “Boone County Slaves: Sales, Estate Divisions and Families, 1820-1865,” Missouri Historical Review, 72, 2 (1978), pp. 176-97; 72, 3 (1978), pp. 271-95. 2781. Magnaghi, Russell M. “The Role of Indian Slavery in Colonial St. Louis,” Bulletin of the Missouri Historical Society, 31, 4 (1975), pp. 264-72. 2782. Mooney, Chase C. Slavery in Tennessee. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1957. 2783. Murphy, James B. “Slavery and Freedom in Appalachia: Kentucky as a Demographic Case Study,” Register of the Kentucky Historical Society, 80, 2 (1982), pp. 151-69. 2784. O’Brien, Mary Lawrence. “Slavery in Louisville during the Antebellum Period, 1820-1860: A Study of the Effects of Urbanization on the Institution of Slavery as it Existed in Louisville, Kentucky” (Louisville, 1979). 2785. Oresky, Marcia Kinder. “Washington County, Tennessee, Slaves,” Journal of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society, 6, 2 (1985), p. 75. 2786. Otto, John Solomon. “The Case for Folk History: Slavery in the Highlands South,” Southern Studies, 20, 2 (1981), pp. 167-73. 2787. Otto, John Solomon. “Slaveholding General Farmers in a ‘Cotton County’,” Agricultural History, 55, 2 (1981), pp. 167-78. 2788. Otto, John Solomon. “Slavery in the Mountains: Yell County Arkansas, 18401860,” Arkansas Historical Quarterly, 39, 1 (1980), pp. 35-52. 2789. Poole, Stafford, and Douglas J. Slawson. Church and Slave in Perry County, Missouri, 1818-1865. Lewiston, N.Y.: Edward Mellen Press, 1986. 2790. Poole, Stafford, and Douglas J. Slawson. “‘Necessity Knows no Law’: Vicentian Slaveholding in Perry County, Missouri, 1818-60” (Paper read to the Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, Los Angeles, 1981). 2791. Scarborough, William K[auffman]. “The Southern Plantation Overseer: A Reevaluation,” Agricultural History, 38, 1 (1964), pp. 13-20. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Southern Slavery at the State and Local Level, pp. (235-42). 2792. Schaefer, Donald F. “Productivity in the Antebellum South: The Western Tobacco Region,” Research in Economic History, 3 (1978), pp. 305-46. 2793. Sears, Richard D. The Day of Small Things: Abolitionism in the Midst of Slavery, Berea, Kentucky, 1854-1864. Lanham, Md.: University Press of America, 1985. 2794. Shafer, Robert S. “White Persons Held to Racial Slavery in Antebellum Arkansas,” Arkansas Historical Quarterly, 44, 2 (1985), pp. 134-55. 2795. Sheldon, Randall G. “From Slave to Caste Society: Penal Changes in Tennessee, 1830-1915,” Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 38, 4 (1979), pp. 462-78. 2796. Smith, John David. “Self-Emancipation in Kentucky (review essay: Howard, Black Liberation in Kentucky, and Walker, Free Frank),” Reviews in American History, 12, 2 (1984), pp. 225-29. 205 2797. Sobel, Mechal. “‘They Can Never Both Prosper Together’: Black and White Baptists in Antebellum Nashville, Tennessee,” Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 38, 3 (1979), pp. 296-307. 2798. Stafford, Hanford Dozier. “Slavery in a Border City: Louisville, 1790-1860” (PhD diss., University of Kentucky, 1982). 2799. Stealey, John Edmund III. “Slavery and the Western Virginia Salt Industry,” Journal of Negro History, 59, 2 (1974), pp. 105-31. Reprinted in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 109-33. 2800. Steel, Edward M., Jr. “Black Monongalians: A Judicial View of Slavery and the Negro in Monongalia County 1776-1865,” West Virginia History, 34, 4 (1973), pp. 331-59. 2801. Tallant, Harold Donald, Jr. “The Slavery Controversy in Kentucky, 1828-1859” (PhD diss., Duke University, 1986). 2802. Taylor, Henry L. “On Slavery’s Fringe: City-Building and Black Community Development in Cincinnati, 1800-1850,” Ohio History, 95 (1986), pp. 5-33. 2803. Taylor, Orville W. “Baptists and Slavery in Arkansas: Relationships and Attitudes,” Arkansas Historical Quarterly, 38, 3 (1979), pp. 199-226. 2804. Taylor, Orville W. “‘Jumping the Broomstick’: Slave Marriage and Morality in Arkansas.” Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (373-87). 2805. Taylor, Orville W. Negro Slavery in Arkansas. Durham: Duke University Press, 1958. 2806. *Terborg-Penn, Rosalyn. “The Exploitation of Slave Women: A Kentucky Case” (Unpublished paper presented to Southern Historical Association, Lexington, Kentucky, 1989). 2807. Trexler, Harrison Anthony. Slavery in Missouri, 1804-1865. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1914. (Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science [Herbert B. Adams, ed.], 32nd series, 2). Reprinted in Slavery in the States: Selected Essays (New York: Negro Universities Press, 1969), original pagination, pp. 8-259 (185-411). 2808. Van Deburg, William L. “The Slave Drivers of Arkansas: A New View from the Narratives,” Arkansas Historical Quarterly, 35, 3 (1976), pp. 231-45. 2809. Wills, W. Ridley II. “Black-White Relationships on the Belle Meade Plantation,” Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 50, 1 (1991), pp. 17-32. 2810. Woodson, Carter. “Freedom and Slavery in Appalachian America,” Journal of Negro History, 1, 2 (1916), pp. 132-50. 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Archaeological Excavations at Magnolia Mound: A Search for the 1830 Kitchen. Baton Rouge: Coastal Environments, Inc., 1977. 2817. *Castille, George J. “A Test of Two Methods of Archaeological Analysis: The Welcome Plantation Artifact Pattern” (MA thesis, Louisiana State University, 1979). 2818. *Castille, George J. Survey and Evaluation of the St. Alice Revetment, St. James Parish, Louisiana. Baton Rouge: Coastal Environments, Inc., 1979. 2819. *Castille, George J. Intensive Cultural Resources Survey of Portions of Wilton and Helvetia Plantations, St. James Parish, Louisiana. Baton Rouge: Coastal Environments, Inc., 1982. 2820. *Castille, George J. and Kathleen G. McCloskey. A Cultural Resources Reconnaissance of Tezcuco, Monroe, and Bruslie Plantations, Ascension Parish, Louisiana. Baton Rouge: Coastal Environments, Inc., 1981. 2821. Christian, Marcus B. Negro Ironworkers in Louisiana, 1718-1800. Gretna, La.: Pelican Publishing Co., l972. 2822. Coles, Harry L., Jr. “Some Notes on Slaveownership and Landownership in Louisiana, 1850-1860,” Journal of Southern History, 9, 3 (1943), pp. 381-94. 2823. Cook, Charles Orson, and James M. Poteet, eds. “‘Dem was Black Times, Sure ‘Nough’: The Slave Narratives of Lydia Jefferson and Stephen Williams,” Louisiana History, 20, 3 (1979), pp. 281-92. 2824. Crosby, Jacqueline R. “Frontier Justice on the Texas-Louisiana Border in the Year 1770” (PhD diss., University of Texas at Arlington, 1988). 2825. “Destrehan’s Slave Roll,” Louisiana Historical Quarterly, 7, 2 (1924), pp. 302-03. 2826. Donaldson, Gary A. “A Window on Slave Culture: Dances at Congo Square in New Orleans, 1800-1862,” Journal of Negro History, 69, 2 (1984), pp. 63-72. 2827. Dormon, James H. “The Persistent Specter: Slave Rebellion in Territorial Louisiana,” Louisiana History, 18, 4 (1977), pp. 389-405. 207 2828. 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Elmwood: The Historic Archeology of a Southeastern Louisiana Plantation. Metairie, La.: Jefferson Parish Historical Commission, 1984. 2834. Hackett, D. L. A. “Slavery, Ethnicity, and Sugar: An Analysis of Voting Behavior in Louisiana, 1828-1844,” Louisiana Studies, 13, 2 (1974), pp. 73-118. 2835. Hall, Gwendolyn Midlo. Africans in Colonial Louisiana: The Development of Afro-Creole Culture in the Eighteenth Century. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1992. 2836. *Hall, Gwendolyn M. “The Creole Slaves,” in Arnold Hirsch and Joseph Logsdon, eds., Ethnic New Orleans (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, forthcoming). 2837. Hanger, Kimberly S. “Avenues to Freedom Open to New Orleans’ Black Population, 1769-1779,” Louisiana History, 31, 3 (1990), pp. 237-64. 2838. Hardy, James D., Jr. “A Slave Sale in Antebellum New Orleans,” Southern Studies, 23, 3 (1984), pp. 306-14. 2839. Hardy, James D., Jr., and Robert B. Robinson. “The Roman Law and Louisiana Slavery: An Example of Mortgage,” Southern Studies, n.s. 1, 4 (1990), pp. 355-69. 2840. Holmes, Jack D. L. “The Abortive Slave Revolt at Point Coupée, Louisiana: 1795,” Louisiana History, 11, 4 (1970), pp. 341-62. 2841. Johnson, Jerah. “New Orleans’s Congo Square: An Urban Setting for Early AfroAmerican Culture Formation,” Louisiana History, 32, 2 (1991), pp. 117-57. 2842. Kendall, John Smith. “The Huntsmen of Black Ivory,” Louisiana Historical Quarterly, 24, 1 (1941), pp. 9-34. 2843. Kendall, John Smith. “New Orleans’ ‘Peculiar Institution’,” Louisiana Historical Quarterly, 23, 3 (1940), pp. 864-86. 208 2844. Kerr, Derek Noel. “Petty Felony, Slave Defiance and Frontier Villainy: Crime and Criminal Justice in Spanish Louisiana, 1770-1803” (PhD diss., Tulane University, 1983). 2845. Kilbourne, R. H. “Securing Antebellum Credit Transactions with Slaves: East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana, 1825-1860” (paper presented to Twentieth Annual Meeting of the American Society for Legal History, Chicago, 18-20 October 1990). 2846. Kotlikoff, Laurence J. “The Structure of Slave Prices in New Orleans, 1804 to 1862,” Economic Inquiry, 17, 4 (1979), pp. 496-518. Reprinted in Fogel and Engerman, eds., Without Consent or Contract, pp. 31-53. 2847. Kotlikoff, Laurence J., and Anton J. Rupert. “The Manumission of Slaves in New Orleans, 1827-1846,” Southern Studies, 19, 2 (1980), pp. 172-81. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Free Blacks in a Slave Society, pp. (322-31). 2848. *Lewis, Neil Madison. “Slavery in Louisiana During the French and Spanish Regimes” (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Photoduplication Services, 1973). 2849. MacDonald, Robert R., John R. Kemp, and Edward F. Haas, eds. Louisiana’s Black Heritage. New Orleans: Louisiana State Museum, 1979. 2850. McConnell, Roland C. “Louisiana’s Black Military History, 1729-1865,” in MacDonald, Kemp, and Haas, eds., Louisiana’s Black Heritage, pp. 32-62. 2851. McDonald, Roderick A. “Independent Economic Production by Slaves on Antebellum Louisiana Sugar Plantations,” in Berlin and Morgan, eds., The Slaves’ Economy, pp. 182-208. (Also Slavery and Abolition, 12, 1 [1991]) 2852. McDonald, Roderick A. “Independent Economic Production by Slaves on Antebellum Louisiana Sugar Plantations,” in Berlin and Morgan, eds., Cultivation and Culture, pp. 275-302. 2853. McGowan, James T. “Creation of a Slave Society: Louisiana Plantations in the Eighteenth Century” (PhD diss., University of Rochester, 1976). 2854. McGowan, James T. “Planters Without Slaves: Origins of a New World Labor System,” Southern Studies, 16, 4 (1977), pp. 5-26. 2855. Malone, Ann Patton. “The Nineteenth Century Slave Family in Rural Louisiana: Its Household and Community Structure” (PhD diss., Tulane University, 1985). 2856. Malone, Ann Patton. “Searching for the Family and Household Structure of Rural Louisiana Slaves, 1810-1864,” Louisiana History, 28, 4 (1987), pp. 357-79. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (311-33). 2857. Menn, Joseph K. The Large Slaveholders of Louisiana, 1860. New Orleans: Pelican, 1964. 2858. Messner, William F. “Black Violence and White Response: Louisiana, 1862,” Journal of Southern History, 41, 1 (1975), pp. 19-38. 209 2859. Miceli, Mary Veronica. “The Influence of the Roman Catholic Church on Slavery in Colonial Louisiana under French Domination, 1718-1763” (PhD diss., Tulane University, 1979). 2860. Moody, V. Alton. “Slavery on Louisiana Sugar Plantations,” Louisiana Historical Quarterly, 7, 2 (1924), pp. 191-301. 2861. Owsley, Douglas W., Charles E. Orser, Jr., Robert W. Mann, Peter Moore-Jansen, and Robert L. Montgomery. “Demography and Pathology of an Urban Slave Population from New Orleans,” American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 74, 2 (1987), pp. 185-97. 2862. Paquette, Robert L. “The Great Louisiana Slave Revolt of 1811” (Unpublished paper, Southern Historical Association, New Orleans, 1990). 2863. Price, John M. “Slavery in Winn Parish,” Louisiana History, 8, 2 (1967), pp. 137-48. Reprinted in Miller and Genovese, eds., Plantation, Town, and County, pp. 60-70; also in Finkelman, ed., Southern Slavery at the State and Local Level, pp. (195-206). 2864. Pritchard, Walter. “Routine on a Louisiana Sugar Plantation under the Slavery Regime,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 14, 2 (1927), pp. 168-78. 2865. Rankin, David C. “The Tannenbaum Thesis Reconsidered: Slavery and Race Relations in Antebellum Louisiana,” Southern Studies, 18, 1 (1979), pp. 5-31. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Southern Slavery at the State and Local Level, pp. (207-33). 2866. Reilly, Timothy F. “Slavery and the Southwestern Evangelist in New Orleans (1860-1861),” Journal of Mississippi History, 41, 4 (1979), pp. 301-17. 2867. Reinders, Robert C. “The Churches and the Negro in New Orleans, 1850-1860,” Phylon, 22, 3 (1961), pp. 241-48. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (607-14). 2868. Reinders, Robert C. “Slavery in New Orleans in the Decade before the Civil War,” Mid-America: An Historical Review, 44, 4 (1962), pp. 211-21. Reprinted in Miller and Genovese, eds., Plantation, Town, and County, pp. 365-76. 2869. Ricard, Ulysses S., Jr. “African Slavery in Provincial Mississippi,” in Native, European, and African Cultures in Mississippi, 1500-1800 (Jackson: Mississippi Department of Archives and History, 1991), pp. 77-90. 2870. Richter, William L. “Slavery in Baton Rouge, 1820-60,” Louisiana History, 10, 2 (1969), pp. 125-45. Reprinted in Miller and Genovese, eds., Plantation, Town, and Country, pp. 377-96. 2871. Ripley, C. Peter. “The Black Family in Transition: Louisiana, 1860-1865,” Journal of Southern History, 41, 3 (1975), pp. 369-80. 2872. Ripley, C. Peter. Slaves and Freedmen in Civil War Louisiana. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1976. 2873. St. Martin, Gerard L. (trans.), and Mathé Allain (intro.). “A Slave Trial in Colonial Natchitoches,” Louisiana History, 28, 1 (1987), pp. 57-9l. 210 2874. Schafer, Judith K. “‘Guaranteed Against the Vices and Maladies Prescribed by Law’: Consumer Protection, the Law of Slave Sales, and the Supreme Court in Antebellum Louisiana,” American Journal of Legal History, 31, 4 (1987), pp. 306-21. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (428-43). 2875. Schafer, Judith K[elleher]. “The Immediate Impact of Nat Turner’s Insurrection on New Orleans,” Louisiana History, 21, 4 (1980), pp. 361-76. 2876. Schafer, Judith K[elleher]. “The Long Arm of the Law: Slave Criminals and the Supreme Court in Antebellum Louisiana,” Tulane Law Review, 60, 6 (1986), pp. 1247-68. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (445-66). 2877. Schafer, Judith K. “The Long Arm of the Law: Slavery and the Supreme Court in Antebellum Louisiana, 1809-1862” (PhD diss., Tulane University, 1985). 2878. Schafer, Judith K[elleher]. “New Orleans Slavery in 1850 as Seen in Advertisements,” Journal of Southern History, 47, 1 (1981), pp. 33-56. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (459-82). 2879. Schafer, Judith K. “‘Open and Notorious Concubinage’: The Emancipation of Slave Mistresses by Will and the Supreme Court in Antebellum Louisiana,” Louisiana History, 28, 2 (1987), pp. 165-82. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Women and the Family in a Slave Society, pp. (339-56); also in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 4, pp. 1185-201. 2880. Schafer, Judith K. “‘The Slave Who Absconds Steals Himself’: Fugitive Slaves, Steamboats and the Supreme Court of Louisiana” (Paper presented to Organization of American Historians, Chicago, 1992). 2881. Schmitz, Mark D. “Economies of Scale and Farm Size in the Antebellum Sugar Sector,” Journal of Economic History, 37, 4 (1977), pp. 959-80. 2882. Tansey, Richard. “Bernard Kendig and the New Orleans Slave Trade,” Louisiana History, 23, 2 (1982), pp. 159-78. 2883. Tansey, Richard. “Out-of-State Free Blacks in Late Antebellum New Orleans,” Louisiana History, 22, 4 (1981), pp. 369-86. 2884. Taylor, Joe Gray. Negro Slavery in Louisiana. Baton Rouge: Louisiana Historical Association, 1963. 2885. Taylor, Joe Gray. “A New Look at Slavery in Louisiana,” in MacDonald, Kemp, and Haas, eds., Louisiana’s Black Heritage, pp. 190-208. 2886. Taylor, Joe Gray. “Slavery in Louisiana During the Civil War,” Louisiana History, 8, 1 (1967), pp. 27-33. 2887. Thompson, Thomas Marshall. “National Newspaper and Legislative Reactions to Louisiana’s Deslondes Slave Revolt of 1811,” Louisiana History, 33, 1 (1991), pp. 5-29. 211 2888. Usner, Daniel H., Jr. “From African Captivity to American Slavery: The Introduction of Black Laborers to Colonial Louisiana,” Louisiana History, 20, 1 (1979), pp. 25-48. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Colonial Southern Slavery, pp. (401-24). 2889. Usner, Daniel H., Jr. Indians, Settlers, and Slaves in a Frontier Exchange Economy: The Lower Mississippi Valley before 1783. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1992. 2890. Vandal, Gilles. “Violence et relations raciales à la Nouvelle-Orléans pendant la guerre civile: un prélude à l’émeute du 30 juillet 1866,” Canadian Review of American Studies, 13, 1 (1982), pp. 15-38. 2891. Westwood, Howard C. “Benjamin Butler’s Enlistment of Black Troops in New Orleans in 1862,” Louisiana History, 26, 1 (1985), pp. 5-22. 2892. Whitten, David O. Andrew Durnford: A Black Sugar Planter in Antebellum Louisiana. Natchitoches, La.: Northwestern State University Press, 1981. 2893. Whitten, David O. “A Black Entrepreneur in Antebellum Louisiana,” Business History Review, 45, 2 (1971), pp. 201-19. 2894. Whitten, David O. “Sugar Slavery: A Profitability Model for Slave Investments in the Antebellum Louisiana Sugar Industry,” Louisiana Studies, 12, 2 (1973), pp. 423-42. 2895. Young, Tommy R. II. “The United States Army and the Institution of Slavery in Louisiana, 1803-1815,” Louisiana Studies, 13, 3 (1974), pp. 201-22. 8. Texas 2896. Addington, Wendell G. “Slave Insurrections in Texas,” Journal of Negro History, 35, 4 (1950), pp. 408-34. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Rebellions, Resistance, and Runaways, pp. (2-28). 2897. Barr, Alwyn. Black Texans: A History of Negroes in Texas, 1528-1971. Austin: Jenkins, 1973. 2898. *Brown, Kenneth L., and Doreen C. Cooper. “The Archaeology of Slave Ethnicity: African Cultural Retentions in a Slave Community” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Baltimore, 1989). 2899. *Brown, Kenneth L., and Doreen C. Cooper. “The Socioeconomic Hierarchy of a Texas Slave Community: Archaeology at the Levi Jordan Plantation” (Unpublished paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Reno, 1988). 2900. Brown, Kenneth L., and Doreen C. Cooper. “Structural Continuity in an AfricanAmerican Slave and Tenant Community,” Historical Archaeology, 24, 4 (1990), pp. 7-19. 2901. Campbell, Randolph B. An Empire for Slavery: The Peculiar Institution in Texas, 18211865. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, l989. 2902. Campbell, Randolph B. “The End of Slavery in Texas: A Research Note,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 88, 1 (1984), pp. 71-80. 212 Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (21-30). 2903. Campbell, Randolph B. “Human Property: The Negro Slave in Harrison County, 1850-1860,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 76, 4 (1973), pp. 384-96. 2904. Campbell, Randolph B. “Intermittent Slave Ownership: Texas as a Test Case,” Journal of Southern History, 51, 1 (1985), pp. 15-30. 2905. Campbell, Randolph B. “Local Archives as a Source of Slave Prices: Harrison County, Texas as a Test Case,” Historian, 36, 4 (1974), pp. 660-69. 2906. Campbell, Randolph B. “The Productivity of Slave Labor in East Texas: A Research Note,” Louisiana Studies, 13, 2 (1974), pp. 154-72. 2907. Campbell, Randolph B. “Slave Hiring in Texas,” American Historical Review, 93, 1 (1988), pp. 107-14. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Southern Slavery at the State and Local Level, pp. (17-24). 2908. Campbell, Randolph B., and Donald K. Pickens. “‘My Dear Husband’: A Texas Slave’s Love Letter, 1862,” Journal of Negro History, 65, 4 (1980), pp. 361-64. 2909. Curlee, Abigail. “The History of a Texas Slave Plantation, 1831-1863,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 26, 2 (1922), pp. 79-127. Reprinted in Miller and Genovese, eds., Plantation, Town, and County, pp. 303-34. 2910. Curlee, Abigail. “A Study of Texas Slave Plantations, 1822 to 1865” (PhD diss., University of Texas, 1932). 2911. Durham, Philip, and Everett L. Jones. The Negro Cowboys. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1965. 2912. Harper, Cecil, Jr. “Slavery Without Cotton: Hunt County, Texas, 1846-1864,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 88, 4 (1985), pp. 387-405. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Southern Slavery at the State and Local Level, pp. (82-100). 2913. Hutchinson, Janis. “The Age-Sex Structure of the Slave Population in Harris County, Texas: 1850 and 1860,” American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 74, 2 (1987), pp. 231-38. 2914. Lack, Paul D. “Slavery and the Texas Revolution,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 89, 2 (1985), pp. 181-202. 2915. Lack, Paul D. “Slavery and Vigilantism in Austin, Texas, 1840-1860,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 85, 1 (1981), pp. 1-20. 2916. Lack, Paul D. “Urban Slavery in the Southwest” (PhD diss., Texas Tech University, 1973). 2917. Ledbetter, Billy D. “White Over Black in Texas: Racial Attitudes in the Antebellum Period,” Phylon, 34, 4 (1973), pp. 406-18. 2918. Lowe, Richard, and Randolph Campbell. “Slave Property and the Distribution of Wealth in Texas, 1860,” Journal of American History, 63, 2 (1976), pp. 316-24. 213 2919. Marten, James. “Slaves and Rebels: The Peculiar Institution in Texas, 1861-1865,” East Texas Historical Journal, 28 1 (1990), pp. 29-36. 2920. Nash, A. E. Keir. “The Texas Supreme Court and Trial Rights of Blacks, 18451860,” Journal of American History, 58, 3 (1971), pp. 622-42. 2921. Sunseri, Alvin R. “Slavery and the Black Man in New Mexico, 1846-1861,” Negro History Bulletin, 38, 7 (1975), pp. 457-59. 2922. Tyler, Ronnie C., and Lawrence R. Murphy, eds. The Slave Narratives of Texas. Austin: Encino Press, 1974. 2923. White, William W. “The Texas Slave Insurrection of 1860,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 52, 3 (1949), pp. 259-85. 2924. Woolfolk, George R. “Cotton Capitalism and Slave Labor in Texas,” Southwestern Social Science Quarterly, 37, 1 (1956), pp. 43-52. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Southern Slavery at the State and Local Level, pp. (301-10). 9. Florida 2925. Brown, Canter, Jr. “The ‘Sarrazota, or Runaway Negro Plantations’: Tampa Bay’s First Black Community,” Tampa Bay History, 12, 2 (1990), pp. 5-19. 2926. *Chance, Marsha and Carl McMurray. “Archaeological Investigations at the Kingsley Plantation State Historic Site, Duval County, Florida” (Unpublished report on file, Florida Department of Natural Resources, Division of Recreation and Parks, Tallahassee, 1984). 2927. Dibble, Ernest F. “Slave Rentals to the Military: Pensacola and the Gulf Coast,” Civil War History, 23 (1977), pp. 101-13. 2928. Fairbanks, Charles H. “The Kingsley Slave Cabins in Duval County, Florida, 1968,” Conference on Historic Site Archaeology Papers, 7 (1974), pp. 62-93. 2929. Fairbanks, Charles H. “Spaniards, Planters, Ships and Slaves: Historical Archaeology in Florida and Georgia,” Archaeology, 29, 3 (1976), pp. 164-72. 2930. Granade, Ray. “Slave Unrest in Florida,” Florida Historical Quarterly, 55, 1 (1976), pp. 18-36. 2931. Hall, Robert L. “Black and White Christians in Florida, 1822-1861,” in Boles, ed., Masters and Slaves in the House of the Lord, pp. 81-98. 2932. Hering, Julia. “Plantation Economy in Leon County, 1830-40,” Florida Historical Quarterly, 33, 1 (1954), pp. 32-47. Reprinted in Miller and Genovese, eds., Plantation, Town, and County, pp. 50-59. 2933. Klingman, Peter D. “A Florida Slave Sale,” Florida Historical Quarterly, 52, 1 (1973), pp. 62-66. 2934. Landers, Jane L. “Black Society in Spanish St. Augustine, 1784-1821” (PhD diss., University of Florida, 1988). 214 2935. McFarlane, Suzanne B. “The Ethnoarchaeology of a Slave Community: The Couper Plantation Site” (MA thesis, University of Florida, 1975). 2936. Milligan, John D. “Slave Rebelliousness and the Florida Maroon,” Prologue, 6, 1 (1974), pp. 4-18. 2937. Mormino, Gary R. “Florida Slave Narratives,” Florida Historical Quarterly, 66, 4 (1988), pp. 399-419. 2938. Ordoñez, Margaret T. “Plantation Self-Sufficiency in Leon County, Florida: 1824-1860,” Florida Historical Quarterly, 60, 4 (1982), pp. 428-39. 2939. Porter, Kenneth W. “Florida Slaves and Free Negroes in the Seminole War, 1835-1842,” Journal of Negro History, 28, 4 (1943), pp. 390-421. Also Bobbs-Merrill Reprint no. BC-222. 2940. Rea, Robert R. “Planters and Plantations in British West Florida,” Alabama Review, 29, 3 (1976), pp. 220-35. 2941. Rivers, Larry E. “‘Dignity and Importance’: Slavery in Jefferson County, Florida 1827 to 1860,” Florida Historical Quarterly, 61, 4 (1983), pp. 404-30. 2942. Rivers, Larry E. “Slavery and the Political Economy of Gadsden County, Florida: 1823-1861,” Florida Historical Quarterly, 70, 1 (1991), pp. 1-19. 2943. Rivers, Larry E. “Slavery in Microcosm: Leon County, Florida, 1824 to 1860,” Journal of Negro History, 66, 3 (1981), pp. 235-45. 2944. Smith, Julia Floyd. Slavery and Plantation Growth in Antebellum Florida, 1821-1860. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1973. 2945. Walker, Karen Jo. Kingsley and His Slaves: Anthropological Interpretation and Evaluation. Columbia: South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, 1988. 2946. Walker, Karen Jo. “Kingsley Plantation and Subsistence Patterns of the Southeastern Coastal Slave,” in Kenneth W. Johnson, Jonathan M. Leader, and Robert C. Wilson, eds., Indians, Colonists, and Slaves: Essays in Memory of Charles H. Fairbanks (Gainesville: Florida Journal of Anthropology, 1985), pp. 35-56. (Special Publication, no. 4) 2947. *Walker, Karen Jo. “Kingsley Slave Cabins W-3 and W-6: A Ceramic Analysis” (Unpublished report on file, Florida State Museum, Gainesville, 1983). 2948. Wright, J. Leitch, Jr. “Blacks in British East Florida,” Florida Historical Quarterly, 54, 4 (1976), pp. 425-42. 10. Other 2949. Aldrich, Orlando. “Slavery or Involuntary Servitude in Illinois Prior to and After its Admission as a State,” Transactions of the Illinois State Historical Society, 22 (1916), pp. 89-99. Also as “Slavery or Involuntary Servitude in Illinois Prior to and After its Admission as a State,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, 9, 2 (1916), pp. 119-32. 215 2950. Alilunas, Leo. “Fugitive Slave Cases in Ohio prior to 1850,” Ohio Archaeological and Historical Quarterly, 49 (1940), pp. 160-84. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Fugitive Slaves, pp. (2-26). 2951. Bailey, David T[homas]. “Slavery and the Churches: The Old Southwest” (PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley, 1979). 2952. Beauregard, Erving E. “Slavery, Higher Education and Academic Freedom in Ohio,” Journal of Presbyterian History, 60, 2 (1982), pp. 210-26. 2953. Beller, Jack. “Negro Slaves in Utah,” Utah Historical Quarterly, 2, 1 (1929), pp. 12226. 2954. Berwanger, Eugene H. “Western Prejudice and the Extension of Slavery,” Civil War History, 12, 3 (1966), pp. 197-212. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery in the North and West, pp. (1-16). 2955. Billington, Monroe. “Black Slavery in Indian Territory: The Ex-Slave Narratives,” Chronicles of Oklahoma, 60, 1 (1982), pp. 56-65. 2956. Blackett, R. J. M. “‘... Freedom or the Martyr’s Grave’: Black Pittsburgh’s Aid to the Fugitive Slave,” Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, 61, 2 (1978), pp. 117-34. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Fugitive Slaves, pp. (27-44). 2957. Bridges, Roger D., ed. “John Mason Peck on Illinois Slavery,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, 75, 3 (1982), pp. 179-217. 2958. Bringhurst, Newell G. “The ‘Descendants of Ham’ in Zion: Discrimination Against Blacks Along the Shifting Mormon Frontier, 1830-1920,” Nevada Historical Society Quarterly, 24, 4 (1981), pp. 298-318. 2959. Bringhurst, Newell G. “The Mormons and Slavery - A Closer Look,” Pacific Historical Review, 50, 3 (1981), pp. 329-38. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (65-74). 2960. Bringhurst, Newell G. Saints, Slaves, and Blacks: The Changing Place of Black People Within Mormonism. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1981. 2961. Call, Steven Rene. “French Slaves, Indian Slaves: Slavery and the Cultural Frontier in the Illinois Country, 1675-1756” (MA thesis, University of Missouri, 1988). 2962. Christensen, James B. “Negro Slavery in the Utah Territory,” Phylon, 18, 3 (1957), pp. 298-305. 2963. Coleman, Ronald Gerald. “A History of Blacks in Utah, 1825-1910” (PhD diss., University of Utah, 1980). 2964. Davenport, T. W. “Slavery Question in Oregon - II,” Oregon Historical Society Quarterly, 9, 4 (1908), pp. 309-73. 2965. Davis, David Brion. “The Significance of Excluding Slavery from the Old Northwest in 1787,” Indiana Magazine of History, 84, 1 (1988), pp. 75-89. 216 2966. Dobak, William A. “Civil War on the Kansas-Missouri Border: The Narrative of Former Slave Andrew Williams,” Kansas History, 6, 4 (1983-84), pp. 237-42. 2967. Duniway, Clyde Augustus. “Slavery in California After 1848,” American Historical Association Annual Report for 1905 (Washington, D.C.: American Historical Association, 1906), vol. 1, pp. 241-48. 2968. Finkelman, Paul. “Evading the Ordinance: The Persistence of Bondage in Indiana and Illinois,” Journal of the Early Republic, 9, 1 (1989), pp. 21-52. 2969. Finkelman, Paul. “The Law of Slavery and Freedom in California, 1848-1860,” California Western Law Review, 17, 3 (1981), pp. 437-64. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 132-59. 2970. Finkelman, Paul. “Slavery, the ‘More Perfect Union’, and the Prairie State,” Illinois Historical Journal, 80, 4 (1987), pp. 248-69. 2971. Forbes, Gerald. “The Part Played by the Enslavement of the Indian in the Removal of the Tribes to Oklahoma,” Chronicles of Oklahoma, 16, 2 (1938), pp. 163-70. 2972. Harris, Newton D. “Negro Servitude in Illinois,” Transactions of the Illinois State Historical Society, 11 (1906), pp. 49-56. 2973. Harris, Norman Dwight. The History of Negro Servitude in Illinois, and of the Slavery Agitation in that State, 1719-1864. Chicago: A. C. McClurg, 1904. 2974. Haynes, N. S. “The Disciples of Christ in Illinois and their Attitude toward Slavery,” Transactions of the Illinois State Historical Society, 19 (1913), pp. 52-59. 2975. Heizer, Robert F. “Indian Servitude in California,” in William C. Sturtevant, et al., eds., Handbook of North American Indians -- Vol. 4: History of Indian-White Relations (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, 1988), pp. 414-16. 2976. Katzman, David M. “Black Slavery in Michigan,” Midcontinent American Studies Journal, 11, 2 (1970), pp. 56-66. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery in the North and West, pp. (160-70). 2977. Lapp, Rudolph M. Blacks in Gold Rush California. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977. 2978. Lapp, Rudolph M. “Negro Rights Activities in Gold Rush California,” California Historical Society Quarterly, 45, 1 (1966), pp. 3-20. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery in the North and West, pp. (171-88). 2979. Lyons, John F. “The Attitude of Presbyterians in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois toward Slavery, 1825-1861,” Journal of the Presbyterian History Society, 11, 2 (1921), pp. 69-82. 2980. Lythgoe, Dennis L. “Negro Slavery and Mormon Doctrine,” Western Humanities Review, 21, 4 (1967), pp. 327-38. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (393-404). 2981. Lythgoe, Dennis L. “Negro Slavery in Utah,” Utah Historical Quarterly, 39, 1 (1971), pp. 40-54. 217 Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Slavery in the North and West, pp. (190-204). 2982. *Matijasic, Thomas D. “The Reaction of the Ohio General Assembly to the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850,” Northwest Ohio Quarterly, 55 (1983), pp. 40-60. 2983. Middleton, Stephen. “The Fugitive Slave Crisis in Cincinnati, 1850-1860: Resistance, Enforcement, and Black Refugees,” Journal of Negro History, 72, 1-2 (1987), pp. 20-32. 2984. Morsberger, Robert E. “Slavery and The Santa Fe Trail, or, John Brown on Hollywood’s Sour Apple Tree,” American Studies, 18, 2 (1977), pp. 87-98. 2985. Pelzer, Louis. “The Negro and Slavery in Early Iowa,” Iowa Journal of History and Politics, 2, 4 (1904), pp. 471-84. 2986. Pierce, Merrily. “Luke Decker and Slavery: His Cases with Bob and Anthony, 1817-1822,” Indiana Magazine of History, 85, 1 (1989), pp. 31-49. 2987. Posey, Walter Brownlow. “The Slavery Question in the Presbyterian Church in the Old Southwest,” Journal of Southern History, 15, 3 (1949), pp. 311-24. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Religion and Slavery, pp. (547-60). 2988. Prince, Benjamin F. “The Rescue Case of 1857,” Ohio Archaeological and Historical Publications, 16 (1907), pp. 292-309. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Fugitive Slaves, pp. (334-51). 2989. Reat, James L. “Slavery in Douglas County, Illinois,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, 11, 2 (1918-19), pp. 177-79. 2990. Russell, Robert B. “Constitutional Doctrines with Regard to Slavery in Territories,” Journal of Southern History, 32, 4 (1966), pp. 466-86. Reprinted in Hall, ed., Law of American Slavery, pp. 501-21. 2991. Savage, William Sherman. Blacks in the West. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1976. 2992. Schoonover, Thomas. “Misconstrued Mission: Expansionism and Black Colonization in Mexico and Central America during the Civil War,” Pacific Historical Review, 49, 4 (1980), pp. 607-20. 2993. Schroeder, Albert H., and Omer C. Stewart, “Indian Servitude in the Southwest,” in William C. Sturtevant, et al., eds., Handbook of North American Indians - Vol. 4: History of Indian-White Relations (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, 1988), pp. 410-13. 2994. Schwartz, Rosalie. Across the Rio to Freedom: U.S. Negroes in Mexico. El Paso: Texas Western Press, University of Texas at El Paso, 1975. 2995. Sharpe, Esther E. “Slavery in the Territories under the Compromise of 1850,” Historical Outlook, 18, 3 (1927), pp. 107-09. 2996. Sheridan, Richard B. “From Slavery in Missouri to Freedom in Kansas: The Influx of Black Fugitives and Contrabands into Kansas, 1854-1865,” Kansas History, 12, 1 (1989), pp. 28-47. 218 2997. Strickland, Arvarh E. “Aspects of Slavery in Missouri, 1821,” Missouri Historical Review, 65, 4 (1971), pp. 505-26. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Southern Slavery at the State and Local Level, pp. (243-64). 2998. Taylor, Quintard. “Slaves and Free Men: Blacks in the Oregon Country, 18401860,” Oregon Historical Quarterly, 83, 2 (1982), pp. 153-70. 2999. Thornbrough, Emma Lou. “Indiana and Fugitive Slave Legislation,” Indiana Magazine of History, 50, 3 (1954), pp. 201-28. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Fugitive Slaves, pp. (433-60). 3000. Wilson, Benjamin C. “Kentucky Kidnappers, Fugitives, and Abolitionists in Antebellum Cass County, Michigan,” Michigan History, 60, 4 (1976), pp. 339-58. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Fugitive Slaves, pp. (413-32). 3001. Woolsey, Ronald C. “A Southern Dilemma: Slavery Expansion and the California Statehood Issue in 1850 - A Reconsideration,” Southern California Quarterly, 65, 2 (1983), pp. 123-44. 3002. Woolsey, Ronald C. “The West Becomes a Problem: The Missouri Controversy and Slavery Expansion as the Southern Dilemma,” Missouri Historical Review, 77, 4 (1983), pp. 409-32. 3003. Zucker, Charles N. “The Free Negro Question: Race Relations in Ante-Bellum Illinois, 1801-1860” (PhD diss., Northwestern University, 1972). 11. Biographies 3004. Agle, Nan Hayden. A Promise is to Keep: The True Story of a Former Slave and the Family She Adopted. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan, 1985. 3005. Albert, Octavia V. Rogers. The House of Bondage, or, Charlotte Brooks and Other Slaves. Introduction by Frances Smith Foster. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. 3006. Alford, Terry. Prince Among Slaves. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1977. 3007. Andrews, William L. To Tell a Free Story: The First Century of Afro-American Autobiography, 1760-1865. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1986. 3008. Andrews, William L., ed. Six Women’s Slave Narratives. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. 3009. *Barksdale-Hall, R. C. “The Steversons: An African-American Family in Slavery and Freedom,” Journal of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society, 6, 4 (1985), pp. 156-70. 3010. Bayliss, John F., ed. Black Slave Narratives. New York: Macmillan, 1970. 3011. Betts, Robert B. In Search of York: The Slave Who Went to the Pacific with Lewis and Clark. Boulder: Colorado Associated University Press, 1985. 3012. Bogin, Ruth. “‘Liberty Further Extended’: A 1776 Antislavery Manuscript by Lemuel Haynes,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 40, 1 (1983), pp. 85-105. 219 3013. Bogin, Ruth. “Sarah Parker Remond: Black Abolitionist from Salem,” Essex Institute Historical Collections, 110, 2 (1974), pp. 120-50. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 1, pp. 135-66. 3014. Boles, John B. “Tension in a Slave Society: The Trial of the Reverend Jacob Gruber,” Southern Studies, 18, 2 (1979), pp. 179-97. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Law, the Constitution, and Slavery, pp. (1-19). 3015. Boney, F. Nash. “Doctor Thomas Hamilton: Two Views of a Gentleman of the Old South,” Phylon, 28, 3 (1967), pp. 288-92. 3016. Bontemps, Arna W., ed. Five Black Lives: The Autobiographies of Venture Smith, James Mars, William Grimes, the Rev. G. W. Offley, James L. Smith. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1971. 3017. Braxton, Joanne M. “Harriet Jacobs’ Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl: The Redefinition of the Slave Narrative Genre,” Massachusetts Review, 27, 2 (1986), pp. 379-87. 3018. Brode, Patrick. The Odyssey of John Anderson. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1989. 3019. Bulkley, Robert D., Jr. “A Democrat and Slavery: Robert Rantoul, Jr.,” Essex Institute Historical Collections, 110 (1974), pp. 261-38. 3020. Burton, Annie L. Memories of Childhood’s Slavery Days. Boston: Ross, 1909. 3021. Callcott, George H. “Omar ibn Seid, a Slave Who Wrote an Autobiography in Arabic,” Journal of Negro History, 39, 1 (1954), pp. 58-63. 3022. Davis, Charles T., and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., eds. The Slave’s Narrative. New York: Oxford University Press, 1985. 3023. Dew, Charles B. “Sam Williams, Forgeman: The Life of an Industrial Slave in the Old South,” in J. Morgan Kousser and James M. McPherson, eds., Region, Race, and Reconstruction: Essays in Honor of C. Vann Woodward (New York: Oxford University Press, 1982), pp. 199-239. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Economics, Industrialization, Urbanization, and Slavery, pp. (97-137). 3024. Edwards, Paul. “‘Master’ and ‘Father’ in Equiano’s Interesting Narrative,” Slavery and Abolition, 11, 2 (1990), pp. 216-26. 3025. Egypt, Ophelia Settle, J. Masuoka, and Charles S. Johnson, eds. Unwritten History of Slaves: Autobiographical Accounts of Negro Ex-Slaves. Nashville: Social Science Institute, Fisk University, 1945. (Social Science Source Documents 1). 2nd ed., Washington: Microcard Editions, 1968. Also as Rawick, American Slave, vol. 18. 3026. Emerson, William C., ed. Stories and Spirituals of the Negro Slave. Boston: Badger and Co., ca. 1930. 3027. Faust, Drew Gilpin. “A Slaveowner in a Free Society: James Henry Hammond on the Grand Tour, 1836-1837,” South Carolina Historical Magazine, 81, 3 (1980), pp. 189-206. 220 3028. Franklin, John Hope. “James Boon, Free Negro Artisan,” Journal of Negro History, 30, 1 (1945), pp. 150-80. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Free Blacks in a Slave Society, pp. (102-32). 3029. Fry, Gladys-Marie. “Harriet Powers: Portrait of a Black Quilter,” Sage, 4, 1 (1987), pp. 11-16. Reprinted in Hine, ed., Black Women in American History, vol. 2, pp. 443-46. 3030. Gatewood, Willard B., Jr., ed. Slave and Freeman: The Autobiography of George L. Knox. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1979. 3031. Gillespie, J. David, and Judi F. 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Howell, Isabel. “John Armfield, Slave-Trader,” Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 2, 1 (1943), pp. 3-29. 3039. Jameson, J. Franklin, ed. “Autobiography of Omar ibn Said, Slave in North Carolina, 1831,” American Historical Review, 30, 4 (1925), pp. 787-95. 3040. Katz, William L., ed. Five Slave Narratives: A Compendium. New York: Arno Press, 1968. 3041. Keckley, Elizabeth. Behind the Scenes, or, Thirty Years a Slave, and Four Years in the White House. Intro. by James Olney. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. 3042. Kendall, Lane Carter. “John McDonough, Slave-Owner,” Louisiana Historical Quarterly, 15, 4 (1932), pp. 646-54; 16, 1 (1933), pp. 125-34. 3043. Logan, Paul E. “Tales of the Customs and Fate of Negro Slaves: Johann Ernst Kolb,” Negro History Bulletin, 44, 4 (1981), pp. 78-80. 3044. McLaurin, Melton A. Celia: A Slave. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1991. 3045. Middleton, Arthur Pierce. “The Strange Story of Job Ben Solomon,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 5, 3 (1948), pp. 342-50. 221 3046. Moore, John Hebron. “Simon Gray, Riverman: A Slave Who Was Almost Free,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 49, 3 (1962), pp. 472-84. Reprinted in Newton and Lewis, eds., The Other Slaves, pp. 157-67. Also BobbsMerrill Reprint no. BC-208. 3047. Northrup, Solomon. Twelve Years a Slave. Eds. Sue Eakin and Joseph Logsdon. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1968. (Original edition 1853.) 3048. Patterson, Ruth Polk. The Seed of Sally Good’n: A Black Family of Arkansas, 18331953. Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky, 1985. 3049. Register, James. Jallon, Arabic Prince of Old Natchez, 1788-1828. Shreveport, La.: Mid-South, 1968. 3050. Ripley, C. Peter. “The Autobiographical Writings of Frederick Douglass,” Southern Studies, 24, 1 (1985), pp. 5-29. 3051. “Saint Without Priesthood: The Collected Testimonies of Ex-slave Samuel D. 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University, La.: Louisiana State University Press, 1938. 3057. Sydnor, Charles S. “The Biography of a Slave,” South Atlantic Quarterly, 26, 1 (1937), pp. 59-63. 3058. Thorp, Daniel B. “Chattel with a Soul: The Autobiography of a Moravian Slave,” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 112, 3 (1988), pp. 433-51. 3059. Tyner, Wayne C. “Charles Colcock Jones: Mission to Slaves,” Journal of Presbyterian History, 55, 4 (1977), pp. 363-80. 3060. Vacheenas, Jean, and Betty Volk. “Born in Bondage: History of a Slave Family,” Negro History Bulletin, 36, 5 (1973), pp. 101-06. 3061. Walker, Juliet E. K. Free Frank: A Black Pioneer on the Antebellum Frontier. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1983. 222 3062. Walker, Juliet E. K. “‘Free’ Frank and New Philadelphia: Slave and Freedman, Frontiersman and Town Founder” (PhD diss., University of Chicago, 1976). 3063. Ware, Lowry. “Reuben Robertson of Turkey Creek: The Story of A Wealthy Black Slaveholder and his Family, White and Black,” South Carolina Historical Magazine, 91, 4 (1990), pp. 261-67. 3064. Wax, Darold D. “Robert Ball Anderson, A Kentucky Slave, 1843-1864,” Register of the Kentucky Historical Society, 81, 3 (1983), pp. 255-73. 3065. Wesley, Charles H., ed. “The Life and History of Abou Bekir Sadiki, Alias Edward Doulan - Documents,” Journal of Negro History, 21, 1 (1936), pp. 52-55. 3066. Williamson, Hugh P. “The Case of Celia the Slave,” Negro Digest, 13, 7 (1964), pp. 78-87. 3067. [Willis, John Ralph] (JRW). “New Light on the Life of Ignatius Sancho: Some Unpublished Letters,” Slavery and Abolition, 1, 3 (1980), pp. 345-58. 3068. Wolff, Cynthia Griffin. “‘Margaret Garner’: A Cincinnati Story,” The Massachusetts Review, 32, 3 (1991), pp. 417-40. 3069. Woodson, Minnie Shumate. “Researching to Document the Oral History of the Thomas Woodson Family [descendants of Sally Hemmings]: Dismantling the Sable Curtain,” Journal of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society, 6, 1 (1985), pp. 3-12. 3070. Wynes, Charles E. “Dr. James Durham, Mysterious Eighteenth-Century Black Physician: Man or Myth?” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 103, 3 (1979), pp. 325-33. 3071. Yellin, Jean Fagan. “Written by Herself: Harriet Jacob’s Slave Narrative,” American Literature, 53, 3 (198l), pp. 479-86. 12. Canada 3072. Bramble, Linda. Black Fugitive Slaves in Early Canada. St. Catharines, Ont.: Vanwell, 1988. 3073. Grant, John N. Black Nova Scotians. Halifax, Nova Scotia: Nova Scotia Museum, 1980. 3074. Hembree, Michael F. “The Question of ‘Begging’: Fugitive Slave Relief in Canada, 1830-1865,” Civil War History, 37, 4 (1991), pp. 314-27. 3075. Lapalice, O. M. H. “Les esclaves noirs à Montréal sous l’ancien régime,” Canadian Antiquarian and Numismatic Journal, 3rd ser., 12, 3 (1915), pp. 136-58. 3076. Macaulay, A. J., and D. A. Boag. “Waterfowl Harvest by Slave Indians in Northern Alberta,” Arctic, 27, 1 (1974), pp. 15-26. 3077. Macdougall, Donald V. “Habeas Corpus, Extradition and a Fugitive Slave in Canada,” Slavery and Abolition, 7, 2 (1986), pp. 119-28. 223 3078. Massicote, E. Z. “L’esclavage au Canada sous le régime anglais,” Bulletin des recherches historiques, 24, 11 (1918), pp. 344-47. 3079. Murray, Alexander L. “The Extradition of Fugitive Slaves from Canada: A Reevaluation,” Canadian Historical Review, 43, 4 (1962), pp. 298-314. Reprinted in Finkelman, ed., Fugitive Slaves, pp. (302-18). 3080. Ralaivola, Clovis. “Deux malgaches à Montréal (Canada) en 1692,” Bulletin de Madagascar, 286 (1970), pp. 266-69. 3081. Riddell, William Renwick. “The Baptism of Slaves in Prince Edward Island,” Journal of Negro History, 6, 3 (1921), pp. 307-09. 3082. Riddell, William Renwick. “Further Notes on Slavery in Canada,” Journal of Negro History, 9, 1 (1924), pp. 26-33. 3083. Riddell, William Renwick. “An International Complication between Illinois and Canada Arising out of Slavery,” Illinois State Historical Society Journal, 25, 1 (1932), pp. 123-26. 3084. Riddell, William Renwick. “Notes on Slavery in Canada,” Journal of Negro History, 4, 4 (1919), pp. 396-411. 3085. Riddell, William Renwick. “Notes on the Slave in Nouvelle-France,” Journal of Negro History, 8, 3 (1923), pp. 3l6-30. 3086. Riddell, William Renwick. “The Slave in Canada,” Journal of Negro History, 5, 3 (1920), pp. 261-377. Reprinted as The Slave in Canada (Washington, D.C.: Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, 1920). 3087. Riddell, William Renwick. “The Slave in Upper Canada,” Journal of Negro History, 4, 4 (1919), pp. 372-95. 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Bowser, Frederick P. “The Free Person of Color in Mexico City and Lima: Manumission and Opportunity, 1580-1650,” in Engerman and Genovese, eds., Race and Slavery, pp. 331-68. 3110. Brady, Robert L. “The Role of Las Casas in the Emergence of Negro Slavery in the New World,” Revista de historia de América, 61-62 (1966), pp. 43-55. 3111. Browning, James. Negro Companions of the Spanish Explorers in the New World. Cambridge, Mass., 1938. (Harvard University Studies in History, no. 11) 3112. Carrancá y Trujillo, Raúl. “El estatuto jurídico de los esclavos en las postrimerías de la colonización española,” Revista de historia de América, 3 (1938), pp. 20-59. 3113. Carrera Damas, Germán. “La supuesta empresa antiesclavista del Conde de Tovar,” Anuario del Instituto de antropología e historia (Caracas), 2 (1965), pp. 67-84. 3114. 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Mercado Rudas, 1981). 3268. “La esclavitud en Centroamérica,” special section in Revista del pensamiento centroamericano, 31 (no. 152) (1976), pp. 61-116. For contents see Sherman, Huper Argüello, Riismandel, and Levitt. 3269. Fiehrer, Thomas. “Hacia una definición de la esclavitud en la Guatemala colonial,” Revista del pensamiento centroamericano, 31, (no. 153) (1976), pp. 41-55. 3270. Fiehrer, Thomas. “Slaves and Freedmen in Colonial Central America: Rediscovering a Forgotten Black Past,” Journal of Negro History, 64, 1 (1979), pp. 39-47. 235 3271. Fortune, Armando. “Estudio sobre la insurreción de los negros esclavos: los cimarrones de Panamá,” Revista Lotería (Panamá), 2a época, 1, 5 (1956), pp. 61-68; 1, 6 (1956), pp. 46-51; 1, 9 (1956), pp. 44-67. 3272. Fortune, Armando. “Los orígenes africanos del negro panameño y su composición étnica a comienzos del siglo XVII,” Revista Lotería (Panamá), 2a época, 5 (no. 56) (julio de 1960), pp. 113-28. 3273. Fortune, Armando. “Orígenes extra-africanos y mestizaje étnico del negro panameño a comienzos del siglo XVII,” Revista Lotería (Panamá), 2a época, 6 (no. 63) (febrero de 1961), pp. 66-78. 3274. Franceschi, Victor M. “Los negros congos en Panamá,” Revista Lotería, 2a época, 5 (no. 51) (febrero de 1960), pp. 93-107. 3275. Guardia, Roberto de la. “El fenómeno de la esclavitud en la civilización panameña,” Hombre y cultura, 2, 3 (1972), pp. 27-73. 3276. *Gudmundson, Lowell. “Mechanisms of Social Mobility for the Population of African Descent in Colonial Costa Rica” (Heredia: IDELA, Universidad Nacional, n.d. mimeo). Translated as Lowell Gudmundson Kristjanson, “Mecanismos de movilidad social para la población de procedencia africana en Costa Rica colonial: manumisión y mestizaje,” in idem, Estratificación socio-racial y económica de Costa Rica: 1700-1850 (San José: Editorial Universidad Estatal a Distancia, 1978), pp. 19-78. 3277. *Hassan, G., Marianela y Perez N., and José Calazon. “Venta y liberación de esclavos en el Istmo de Panamá desde el siglo XVIII hasta el siglo XIX” (Trabajo de graduación, Universidad de Panamá, n.d.). 3278. Hüper Argüello, William. “Rasgos de la esclavitud en Nicaragua,” Revista del pensamiento centroamericano, 31 (no. 152) (1976), pp. 76-99. 3279. Kunst, J. “Notes on Negroes in Guatemala during the Seventeenth Century,” Journal of Negro History, 1, 4 (1916), pp. 392-98. 3280. “La libertad de los esclavos,” Boletín del Archivo General del Gobierno (Guatemala), 3, 2 (1938), pp. 277-95. 3281. *Martinez, Yolanda. “Documentación relativa a la población negra existente en el Archivo Nacional de Panamá, siglo XVIII y mitad del siglo XIX” (Trabajo de graduación, Universidad de Panamá, 1972). 3282. Meléndez Chaverri, Carlos. “Los orígenes de los esclavos africanos en Costa Rica,” in XXXVI Congresso Internacional de Americanistas: Actas y memorias (Seville, 1966) (Buenos Aires, 1968), vol. 4, pp. 387-91. 3283. Meléndez Chaverri, Carlos, and Quince Duncan. El negro en Costa Rica: antología. San José: Editorial Costa Rica, 1972. 3284. Olien, Michael D. “Black and Part-Black Populations in Colonial Costa Rica: Ethnohistorical Resources and Problems,” Ethnohistory, 27, 1 (1980), pp. 13-29. 236 3285. Olien, Michael D. “The Negro in Costa Rica: The Ethnohistory of an Ethnic Minority in a Complex Society” (PhD diss., University of Oregon, 1967). 3286. Riismandel, John N., and James H. Levitt. “Algunos aspectos cuantitativos de la esclavitud en Costa Rica en tiempos de la colonia,” Revista del pensamiento centroamericano, 31 (no. 152) (1976), pp. 101-16. 3287. Riismandel, John N., and James H. Levitt. “Costa Rican Slavery: A Computerized Approach” (forthcoming). 3288. Rivera Domínguez, Rafael. “Los orígenes tribales del negro colonial panameño,” Hombre y cultura (Revista del Centro de Investigaciones Antropológicas de la Universidade de Panamá), 1, 5 (1966), pp. 172-81. 3289. Robert Luján, Enrique. “La abolición de la esclavitud en Costa Rica,” Anales de la Academia de geografía y historia de Costa Rica (1962-63), pp. 68-74. 3290. Romero, Fernando. “El ‘Rey Bayano’ y los negros panameños en los mediados del siglo XVI,” Hombre y cultura, 3, 1 (1975), p. 39. 3291. Sherman, William L. Forced Native Labor in Sixteenth-Century Central America. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1979. 3292. Sherman, William L. “Indian Slavery and the Cerrato Reforms,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 51, 1 (1971), pp. 25-50. Translated as “La esclavitud indígena y las reformas de Cerrato,” Revista del pensamiento centroamericano, 31 (no. 152) (1976), pp. 62-75. 3293. *Sherman, William L. “Indian Slavery in Guatemala 1524-1550” (MA thesis, University of New Mexico, 1966). 3294. *Williams, Agatha. “La esclavitud negra en la historia de Panamá” (Trabajo de graduación, Universidad de Panamá, 1968). 3295. Zavala, Silvio. “Los esclavos indios en Guatemala,” Historia mexicana, 19, 4 (no. 76) (1970), pp. 459-65. 4. New Granada and Gran Colombia 3296. Bierck, Harold C., Jr. “The Struggle for Abolition in Gran Colombia,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 33, 3 (1953), pp. 365-86. 3297. Chandler, David L. “Health and Slavery: A Study of Health Conditions among Negro Slaves in the Viceroyalty of New Granada and its Associated Slave Trade, 16001810” (PhD diss., Tulane University, 1972). 3298. Chandler, David L. Health and Slavery in Colonial Colombia. New York: Arno, 1981. 3299. Friedemann, Nina S. “Cabildos negros: refugios de africania en Colombia,” Caribbean Studies, 23, 1-2 (1990), pp. 83-97. 3300. Gomez, Tomaz. “Un aspect de l’exploitation du travail indigène en Nouvelle Grenade au XVIe siècle: le portage,” Journal de la Société des Américanistes, 64 (1977), pp. 89106. 237 3301. Granda Gutierrez, Germán de. “Datos antroponímicos sobre negros esclavos musulmanos en Nueva Granada,” Thesaurus, 27, 1 (1972), pp. 89-103. 3302. Granda Gutierrez, Germán de. “Testimonios documentales sobre la preservación del sistema antroponímico TWI entre los esclavos negros de la Nueva Granada,” Revista española de lingüistica, 1, 2 (1971), pp. 265-74. 3303. Hudson, Randall O. “The Status of the Negro in Northern South America, 18201860,” Journal of Negro History, 49, 4 (1964), pp. 225-39. 3304. Jaramillo Uribe, Jaime. “Esclavos y señores en la sociedad colombiana del siglo XVIII,” in idem, Ensayos de historia social: Vol. 1, La sociedad neogranadina (2nd ed.) (Bogotá: Ediciones Uniandes and Tercer Mundo Editores, 1989), pp. 7-84. 3305. Jaramillo Uribe, Jaime. “La controversia jurídica y filosófica librada en la Nueva Granada en torno a la liberación de los esclavos y la importancia económica-social de la esclavitud en el siglo XIX,” Anuario colombiano de historia social y de la cultura, 4 (1969), pp. 6386. Reprinted in idem, Ensayos de historia social: Vol. 1, La sociedad neogranadina (2nd ed) (Bogotá: Ediciones Uniandes and Tercer Mundo Editores, 1989), pp. 219-50. 3306. King, James F. “Negro Slavery in New Granada,” in Adele Ogden and Engel Sluiter, eds., Greater America: Essays in Honor of H. E. Bolton (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1945), pp. 295-318. 3307. King, James F. “Negro Slavery in the Viceroyalty of New Granada” (PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley, 1940). 3308. Kitchens, John W., and J. León Helguera. “Los vecinos de Popayán y la esclavitud en la Nueva Granada,” Boletín de historia y antigüedades (Bogotá), 63, 2 (no. 713) (1976), pp. 219-39. 3309. Kuethe, Allan J. “The Status of the Free Pardo in the Disciplined Militia of New Granada,” Journal of Negro History, 56, 2 (1971), pp. 105-17. 3310. León Helguera, J., and Alberto Lee López, eds. “La exportación de esclavos en la Nueva Granada,” Archivos (Academia Colombiana de Historia, Bogotá), 1, 3 (1967), pp. 447-59. 3311. Meiklejohn, Norman A. “The Implementation of Slave Legislation in EighteenthCentury New Granada,” in Toplin, ed., Slavery and Race Relations in Latin America, pp. 176203. 3312. Meiklejohn, Norman A. “The Observance of Negro Slave Legislation in Colonial Nueva Granada” (PhD diss., Columbia University, 1968). 3313. Noyes, Antonio José Galvis. “La abolición de la esclavitud en la Nueva Granada, 1820-1832,” Boletín de historia y antigüedades (Bogotá), 67, 3 (no. 730) (1980), pp. 469-572. 5. Colombia 3314. *Arboleda, José Rafael. “The Ethnohistory of the Colombian Negroes” (MA thesis, Northwestern University, 1950). 238 3315. Arboleda, José Rafael. “La historia y la antropología del negro en Colombia,” Revista de la Universidad de Antioquia (Medellín), 41, 2 (no. 157) (1964), pp. 233-48. 3316. Ascencio, Michaelee. “Del nombre de los esclavos,” in idem, Del nombre de los esclavos (Caracas: Fondo Editorial de Humanidades y Educación, Universidad Central de Venezuela, 1984), pp. 25-98. 3317. Avila, Abel. Palenque - semillero de negros. Barranguilla (Colombia): Talleres de Grafitalia, 1980. 3318. Borrego Plá, María del Carmen. “Palenques de negros cimarrones en Cartagena de Indias,” in Atti del XL Congresso Internazionale degli Americanisti (Roma-Genova, 1972) (Genoa: Tilgher, 1975), vol. 3, pp. 429-32. 3319. Borrego Plá, María del Carmen. Palenques de negros en Cartagena de Indias a fines del siglo XVII. Seville: Escuela de Estudios Hispano-Americanos de Sevilla, 1973. 3320. Castellanos, Jorge. La abolición de la esclavitud en Popayán, 1832-1852. Cali, Colombia: Departamento de Publicaciones, Universidad del Valle, 1980. 3321. Castillo Mathieu, Nicolás del. Esclavos negros en Cartagena y sus aportes léxicos. Bogotá: Instituto Caro y Cuervo, 1982. Including “Cartagena, puerto negrero (1533-1810),” reprinted in La llave de las Indias (Bogotá: Ediciones El Tiempo, 1981), pp. 167-293ff. 3322. Chandler, David L. “Family Bonds and Bondsmen: The Slave Family in Colonial Colombia,” Latin American Research Review, 16, 2 (1981), pp. 107-31. 3323. Colmenares, Germán. Historia económica y social de Colombia. Tomo II: Popayán: una sociedad esclavista, 1680-1860. Bogotá: La Carreta Inéditos, 1979. 3324. Eguren, Juan A. “Sandoval frente a la raza esclavizada,” Revista de la Academia colombiana de historia eclesiastica, 29-30 (1973), pp. 57-86. 3325. Eguren, Juan A. “Sandoval frente a los esclavos negros (1607-1652),” Montalbán, 1 (1972), pp. 405-32. 3326. Escalante, Aquiles. El negro en Colombia. Bogotá: Universidad Nacional de Colombia, 1964. 3327. Escalante, Aquiles. “Notas sobre el palenque de San Basilio, una communidad negra en Colombia,” Divulgaciones ethnologicas, 3, 5 (1954), pp. 207-359. Selection translated in Price, ed., Maroon Societies, pp. 74-81. 3328. Fernándes Esquivel, Franco. “Procedencia de los esclavos negros, analizada através del complejo de distribución, desarrollado desde Cartagena,” Revista de historia (Heredia), 2 (no. 3) (1976), pp. 43-80. 3329. García, Julio César. “El movimiento antiesclavista en Colombia,” Boletín de historia y antigüedades (Bogotá), 41 (nos. 473-74) (1954), pp. 130-43. 3330. González, Margarita. “El proceso de manumisión en Colombia,” Cuadernos colombianos (Bogotá), 2 (1974), pp. 147-240. 239 3331. Granda Gutierrez, Germán de. “Onomástica y procedencia africana de esclavos negros en las minas del sur de la gobernación de Popayán (siglo XVIII),” Revista española de antropologia americana, 6 (1971), pp. 381-442. 3332. Hernández de Alba, Gregorio. Libertad de los esclavos en Colombia. Bogotá: Editorial ABD, 1950. 3333. Jaramillo Uribe, Jaime. “Esclavos y señores en la sociedad colombiana del siglo XVIII,” Anuario colombiano de historia social y de la cultura, 1, 1 (1963), pp. 3-62. 3334. McFarlane, Anthony. “Cimarrones and Palenques: Runaways and Resistance in Colonial Colombia,” Slavery and Abolition, 6, 3 (1985), pp. 131-51. 3335. Meisel, Adolfo. “Rural Slavery and Racial Mixture in the Province of Cartagena” (Paper read to the Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, Los Angeles, 1981). 3336. Meisel Roca, Adolfo. “Esclavitud, mestizaje y haciendas en la Provincia de Cartagena: 1533-1851,” Desarrollo y sociedad, 4 (1980), pp. 229-77. 3337. Mina, Mateo. Esclavitud y libertad en el Valle del Rio Cauca. Bogotá: Fundación Rosca de Investigación y Acción Social, 1975. 3338. Múnera, Alfonso. “Balance historiográfico de la esclavitud en Colombia,” Historia y sociedad, 3 (1990), pp. 169-97. 3339. *Navarrete Pelaes, Maria Cristina. “Los negros en Colombia, 1600-1725” (Diss., Universidad Complutense de Madrid, 1971). 3340. *Palacios Preciado, Jorge. “Cartagena de Indias, gran factoría de mano de obra esclava” (Unpublished?, 1975). 3341. Picón-Salas, Mariano. Pedro Claver, el santo de los esclavos. Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Economica, 1950. 3342. Porras Troconis, Gabriel. Vida de San Pedro Claver, esclavo de los esclavos. Bogotá: Santafé, 1954. 3343. Posada, Eduardo. “La esclavitud en Colombia,” Boletín de historia y antigüedades (Bogotá), 16 (no. 187) (1927), pp. 398-403; (no. 189), pp. 526-44; (no. 190), pp. 614-28. 3344. Posada, Eduardo. La esclavitud en Colombia. Bogotá: Imprenta Nacional, 1933. Bound with Restrepo Canal, Leyes de manumisión. 3345. Restrepo Canal, Carlos. “Documentos sobre esclavos,” Boletín de historia y antigüedades (Bogotá), 24 (no. 274) (1937), pp. 486-92. 3346. Restrepo Canal, Carlos. Leyes de manumisión. Bogotá: Imprenta Nacional, 1933. Bound with Posada, La esclavitud en Colombia. 3347. Restrepo Canal, Carlos. La libertad de los esclavos en Colombia; o leyes de manumisión. II. Bogotá: Imprenta nacional, 1938. 3348. Rojas Gómez, Roberto. “La esclavitud en Colombia,” Boletín de historia y antigüedades (Bogotá), 14 (no. 158) (1922), pp. 83-108. 240 3349. Sharp, William F. “Manumission, Libres, and Black Resistance: The Colombian Chocó, 1680-1810,” in Toplin, ed., Slavery and Race Relations in Latin America, pp. 89-111. 3350. Sharp, William F.”El negro en Colombia: manumisión y posición social,” Razón y fábula (Bogotá), 8 (1968), pp. 91-107. 3351. Sharp, William F. “The Profitability of Slavery in the Colombian Chocó, 16801810,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 55, 3 (1975), pp. 468-95. Translated as “La rentabilidad de la esclavitud en el Chocó, 1680-1810,” Anuario colombiano de historia social y de la cultura, 8 (1976), pp. 19-45. 3352. Sharp, William F. Slavery on the Spanish Frontier: The Colombian Choco, 1680-1810. Norman, Okla.: University of Oklahoma Press, 1976. 3353. Sharp, William F[rederick]. “Una imagen del negro,” UN: Revista de la Dirección de divulgación cultural: Universidad nacional de Colombia (Bogotá), 2 (1969), pp. 171-85. 3354. Taussig, Michael. “Black Religion and Resistance in Colombia: Three Centuries of Social Struggle in the Cauca Valley,” Marxist Perspectives, 2, 2 (1979), pp. 84-116. 3355. Taussig, Michael. “The Evolution of Rural Wage Labour in the Cauca Valley of Colombia, 1700-1970,” in Kenneth Duncan and Ian Rutledge, eds., Land and Labour in Latin America (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1977), pp. 397-434. 3356. Teschauer, Pe. Carlos. “O escravo dos escravos ou S. Pedro Claver, o apóstolo dos negros,” Estudos leopoldenses (São Leopoldo, Brazil), 16 (ano 15, no. 55) (1980), pp. 4388. 3357. Torres Giraldo, Ignacio. Los inconformes: historia de la rebeldía de las masas en Colombia. 3 vols. Bogotá, 1972. 3358. Valtierra, Angel, S.J. Pedro Claver: el santo redentor de los negros. Bogotá: Banco de la Republica, 1980. (Nueva edicion reestructurada, 2 vols.) 3359. Valtierra, Angel, S.J. San Pedro Claver: el santo que libertó una raza. Cartagena: Departamento de Publicaciones, Santuario de San Pedro Claver, 1964. 3360. Valtierra, Angel, S.J. El santo que libertó una raza: San Pedro Claver, S.J., esclavo de los esclavos negros. Su vida y su época (1580-1654). Bogotá: Impr. Nacional, 1954. 3361. Zulueta, Eduardo. “Movimiento antiesclavista en Antioquia,” Boletín de historia y antigüedades (Bogotá), 10 (no. 109) (1915), pp. 32-37. 6. Venezuela 3362. Acosta Saignes, Miguel. “Gentilicios africanos en Venezuela,” Archivos venezolanos de folklore, ano IV-V, tomo 3, no. 4 (1955-56), pp. 9-30. 3363. Acosta Saignes, Miguel. “Los negros cimarrones de Venezuela,” in El movimiento emancipador de Hispanoamérica: Actas y ponencias (Caracas: Academia nacional de la historia, 1961), vol. 3, pp. 351-98. 3364. Acosta Saignes, Miguel. Vida de los esclavos negros en Venezuela. Caracas: Hespérides, 1967. 241 Selection translated as “Life in a Venezuelan Cumbe,” in Price, ed., Maroon Societies, pp. 64-73. 3365. Arcaya, Pedro M. Insurrección de los negros de la Serranía de Coro. Caracas: Instituto panamericano de geografia e historia, 1949. 3366. Arcila Farías, Eduardo. “La abolición de la esclavitud en Venezuela,” La Torre, 21, 81-82 (1973), pp. 257-66. 3367. Bermudez Gomez, Eduardo. “Le religión como factor aglutinante del negro esclavo e elemento de resistencia etnica durante el período colonial en Venezuela (XVIXIX)” (Paper presented to “Born out of Resistance,” International and Interdisciplinary Congress on Caribbean Cultural Creativity as a Response to European Expansion, 23-28 March 1992, Center for Caribbean and Latin American Studies, Utrecht University). 3368. Brito Figueroa, Federico. “El comercio de esclavos negros y la mano de obra esclava en la economia colonial venezolana,” Economia y ciencias sociales (Caracas), 6, 3 (1964), pp. 5-46. 3369. Brito Figueroa, Federico. Las insurrecciones de los esclavos negros en la sociedad colonial venezolana. Caracas: Editorial Cantaclare, 1961. 3370. Brito Figueroa, Federico. “Los esclavos de Chuao en el siglo XIX: el problema de las primeras décadas del siglo XIX,” Boletín ‘Semestre histórico’ (Universidad central de Venezuela, Facultad de humanidades y educación), 2 (1975), pp. 7-46. 3371. Brito Figueroa, Federico. El problema tierra y esclavos en la historia de Venezuela. Caracas: Ediciones Teoría y Praxis, 1973. 2nd ed., corrected and enlarged (Caracas: Universidad Central de Venezuela, Ediciones de la Biblioteca, 1985). 3372. Castillo, Aureo Yépez. “Los esclavos negros en Venezuela en la segunda década del siglo XIX: fundamentos legales y actuación,” Boletín de la Academia nacional de la historia (Caracas), 63, 3 (no. 249) (1980), pp. 113-41. 3373. Ferry, Robert J. “Encomienda, African Slavery, and Agriculture in Seventeenth Century Caracas,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 61, 4 (1981), pp. 609-35. 3374. Ferry, Robert J. “The Slave Trade, Slavery and Society in Colonial Caracas,” Indian Historical Review, 15, 1-2 (1988-89), pp. 63-70. 3375. Friede, Juan. “Orígenes de la esclavitud indígena en Venezuela,” Boletín de la Academia nacional de la historia (Caracas), 44, 173 (1961), pp. 61-75. 3376. García, Jesús Chucho. Contra el cepo: Barlovento tiempo de cimarrones. San José de Barlovento, Estado Miranda, Venezuela: Editorial Lucas y Trina, 1989. 3377. Gomez Jimenez, Alcides, and Luz Marina Dias M. La moderna esclavitud: los indocumentados en Venezuela. Bogotá: Fines, Editorial Oveja Negra, 1983. 3378. Guerra Cedeño, Franklin. Esclavos negros, cimarroneras y cumbes de Barlovente. Caracas: Lagoven, 1984. 3379. Herrero, Rafael. The Colonial Slave Plantation as a Form of Hacienda: A Preliminary Outline of the Case of Venezuela. Glasgow: Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Glasgow, 1978. (Occasional Papers, no. 25) 242 3380. Jimenez G[raziani], Morella A. La esclavitud indigena en Venezuela (siglo XVI). Caracas: Biblioteca de la Academia Nacional de la Historia, 1986. 3381. Laviña, Javier. “El miedo a los esclavos: Influencia de la Revolución Francesa en Venezuela?” (Conference on “Abolición de la Esclavitud,” Madrid, 2-4 December 1986, Centro de Estudios Historicos). 3382. Laviña, Javier. “¿Revolución francesa o miedo a la negritude? Venezuela, 17901800,” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 43-49. 3383. Liscano, Juan. “Lugar de origen de los tambords redondos barloventeños de Venezuela,” Folklore americano (Lima), 17/18 (no. 16) (1969-70), pp. 134-39. 3384. Lombardi, John V. “The Abolition of Slavery in Venezuela: A Nonevent,” in Toplin, ed., Slavery and Race Relations in Latin America, pp. 228-52. 3385. Lombardi, John V. “The Decline and Abolition of Negro Slavery in Venezuela (1820-1854)” (PhD diss., Columbia University, 1968). 3386. Lombardi, John V. The Decline and Abolition of Negro Slavery in Venezuela, 18201854. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Publishing Co., 1971. Translated as Decadencia y abolición de la esclavitud en Venezuela (Caracas: Ediciones de la Biblioteca Universidad Central de Venezuela, 1974). 3387. Lombardi, John V. “Los esclavos en la legislación republicana de Venezuela,” Fundación John Boulton: Boletín histórico, 5 (no. 13) (1967), pp. 43-67. 3388. Lombardi, John V. “Manumission, manumisos, and aprendizaje in Republican Venezuela,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 49, 4 (1969), pp. 656-78. 3389. Lopez García, José Tomás. Dos defensores de los esclavos negros en el siglo XVIII: Francisco José de Jaca y Epifanio de Moirans. Caracas: Universidad Católica Andrés Bello, 1982. 3390. “Material documental sobre esclavos,” Boletín de la Academia Nacional de Historia (Venezuela), 50, 1 (no. 277) (1987), pp. 261-62. 3391. Muñoz, Pedro José. “Breves anotaciones acerca de la esclavitud y de la liberación de los esclavos en Venezuela,” Boletín de la Academia nacional de la historia (Caracas), 57, 2 (no. 225) (1974), pp. 41-56. 3392. Nuñez Ponte, José Manuel. Estudio histórico acerca de la esclavitud y de su abolición en Venezuela. Caracas: Tip. Emp. El Cojo, 1911. 3393. Ochoa, Eduardo Perez. “Participación del negro en la independencia de la Nueva Granada y Venezuela (1810-1830),” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 225-29. 3394. Perazzo, Nicolás. “La situación de los esclavos en el Valle de Yaracuy,” Boletín de la Academia nacional de la historia (Caracas), 67 (no. 267) (1984), pp. 507-09. 3395. Pollack-Eltz, Angelina. “Slave Revolts in Venezuela,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 439-45. 3396. Ramos Guedez, Jose Marcial. “L’insurrection nègre de Coro en 1795 au Venezuela,” in Michel L. Martin and Alain Yacou, eds., De la révolution française aux révolutions créoles et nègres (Paris: Editions Caribéennes, 1989), pp. 53-60. 243 3397. Rondón Márquez, Rafael Angel. La esclavitud en Venezuela: el proceso de su abolición y las personalidades de sus decisivos propulsores, José Gregorio Monagas y Simón Planas. Caracas: Tip. Garrido, 1954. 3398. “La sublevación de los negros de la Sierra de Coro,” Boletín de la Academia nacional de la historia (Caracas), 66 (no. 261) (1983), pp. 243-45. 3399. Troconis de Veracoechea, Ermila. “Esclavos blancos en la Venezuela colonial,” Boletín del Archivo General de la Nación (Venezuela), 62 (no. 222) (1972), pp. 64-67. 3400. Troconis de Veracoechea, Ermila. “Notas sobre los esclavos y la guerra de independencia de Venezuela,” Cuadernos afro-americanos, 1, 1 (1975), pp. 159-70. 3401. Troconis de Veracoechea, Ermila. “Tres cofradías de negros en la iglesia de ‘San Mauricio’ en Caracas,” Montalbán, 5 (1976), pp. 339-76. 3402. Troconis de Veracoechea, Ermila, ed. Documentos para el estudio de los esclavos negros en Venezuela. Caracas: Academia Nacional de la Historia, 1969. 7. Ecuador 3403. Alcina Franch, José. “El problema de las poblaciones negroides de Esmeraldas, Ecuador,” Anuario de estudios americanos, 31 (1974), pp. 33-46. 3404. *Alcina Franch, José. “Los negros en Esmeraldas (siglos XVI-XIX),” in Homenaje a Antonio Muro Orejón (Seville, 1974). 3405. Estupinián Tello, Julio. El negro en Esmeraldas: apuntes para su estudio. Quito, 1967. 3406. Paniagua Pérez, Jesús. “La esclavitud en Cuenca del Perú (1770-1810),” Estudios humanísticos: Geografia, Historia, Arte (Léon), 8 (1986), pp. 121-43. 3407. Phelan, John L. “The Road to Esmeraldas: The Failure of a Spanish Conquest in the Seventeenth Century,” in Henry Bluhm, ed., Essays in History and Literature Presented by the Fellows of the Newberry Library to Stanley Pargellis (Chicago: The Newberry Library, 1965), pp. 91-107. 8. Peru 3408. Blanchard, Peter. “Slave Resistance in a ‘Humane’ Slavery System: The Case of Early Republican Peru” (Paper presented to “Born out of Resistance,” International and Interdisciplinary Congress on Caribbean Cultural Creativity as a Response to European Expansion, 23-28 March 1992, Center for Caribbean and Latin American Studies, Utrecht University). 3409. Bowser, Frederick P. The African Slave in Colonial Peru, 1524-1650. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1974. 3410. Cushner, Nicholas P. “Slave Mortality and Reproduction on Jesuit Haciendas in Colonial Peru,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 55, 2 (1975), pp. 177-99. 3411. Harth-Terré, Emilio, and Alberto Márquez Abanto. “El artesano negro en la arquitectura virreinal limeña,” Revista del Archivo Nacional del Perú, 25 (1961), pp. 360-430. 244 3412. Harth-Terré, Emilio. “El esclavo negro en la sociedad indoperuana,” Journal of Inter-American Studies, 3, 3 (1961), pp. 297-340. 3413. Harth-Terré, Emilio. Negros e indios: un estamento social ignorado de Perú colonial. Lima: Editorial Juan Mejia Baca, 1973. 3414. Helmer, Marie. “Note sur les esclaves indiens au Pérou (XVIe siècle),” Bulletin de la Faculté des Lettres de Strasbourg, 43, 7 (1965), pp. 683-90. (Travaux de l’Institut d’études latino-américaines, no. 5) 3415. Kapsoli E., Wilfredo. Sublevaciones de esclavos en el Perú, s. XVIII. Lima: Universidad Ricardo Palma, 1975. 3416. Millones, Luis. “Gente negra en el Perú: esclavos y conquistadores,” América indígena, 31, 3 (1971), pp. 593-624. 3417. Peralta Rivera, Ernesto Germán. “Informe preliminar al estudio de la tributación de negros libres mulatos y zambahigos en el siglo XVIII peruano,” in Atti del XL Congresso Internazionale degli Americanisti (Roma-Genova, 1972) (Genoa: Tilgher, 1975), vol. 3, pp. 43338. 3418. Regueiro, Ovidio Garcia. “Agricultura comercial y esclavismo en la época de Carlos III: un proyecto para las regiones peruanas,” Moneda y crédito: revista de economia, 187 (1988), pp. 63-81. 3419. Tardieu, Jean-Pierre. “La pathologie rédhibitoire de l’esclavage en milieu urbain: Lima XVIIème siècle,” Jahrbuch für Geschichte von Staat, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft Lateinamerikas, 26 (1989), pp. 19-35. 3420. Tardieu, Jean-Pierre. L’église et les Noirs au Pérou, XVIe-XVIIe s. Lille: Atelier National de Reproduction des Thèses, Université de Lille, 1987. 3421. Tardieu, Jean-Pierre. “L’église et les noirs au Pérou (XVIe et XVIIe siècles),” Revue du CERC (Centre d’études et de recherches caraïbéennes, Université des Antilles - Guyane), 5 (1988), pp. 107-30. 3422. Tardieu, Jean-Pierre. “Le marronnage à Lima (1535-1560): atermoiements et répression,” Revue historique, 278, 2 (no. 564) (1987), pp. 293-319. 9. Bolivia 3423. Crespo R., Alberto. Esclavos negros en Bolivia. La Paz: Academia Nacional de Ciencias de Bolivia, 1977. 3424. Portugal Ortiz, Max. “Anotaciones para el estudio de la venta de esclavos negros en la ciudad de La Paz,” Illimani, l (1972), pp. 66-75. 3425. Portugal Ortiz, Max. La esclavitud negra en las épocas colonial y nacional de Bolivia. La Paz: Instituto boliviano de cultura, 1977. 3426. Wolff, Inge. “Negersklaverei und Negerhandel in Hochperu 1545-1640,” Jahrbuch für Geschichte von Staat, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft Lateinamerikas, 1 (1964), pp. 157-86. 245 10. Chile 3427. Feliú Cruz, Guillermo. La abolición de la esclavitud en Chile: estudio histórico y social. Santiago: Universidad de Chile, 1942. 3428. Jara, Alvaro. “Los asientos de trabajo y la provisión del mano de obra para los no-encomenderos en la ciudad de Santiago 1586-1600,” Revista chilena de historia y geografía, 125 (1957), pp. 21-95. 3429. Jara, Alvaro. Guerre et société au Chili: essai de sociologie coloniale: la transformation de la guerre d’Araucanie et l’esclavage des indiens, du début de la conquête espagnole aux débuts de l’esclavage légal (1612). Paris: Université de Paris, Institut des hautes études de l’Amérique Latine, 1961. (Travaux et mémoires, no. 9) 3430. Jara, Alvaro. “Importación de trabajadores indígenas en el siglo XVII,” in Miscellanea Paulo Revet (Mexico: Universidad Autónoma, 1958), vol. 2, pp. 733-63. Also in Revista chilena de historia y geografía, 124 (1958), pp. 177-212. 3431. Mellafe, Rolando. La introducción de la esclavitud negra en Chile: tráfico y rutas. Santiago: Universidad de Chile, 1959. 3432. Sater, William F. “The Black Experience in Chile,” in Toplin, ed., Slavery and Race Relations in Latin America, pp. 13-50. 3433. Segall, Marcelo. “Esclavitud y tráfico culíes en Chile,” Journal of Inter-American Studies, 10, 1 (1968), pp. 117-33. 3434. Vial Correa, Gonzalo. El africano en el reino de Chile: ensayo histórico-jurídico. Santiago: Universidad Católica de Chile, 1957. 11. Argentina 3435. Andrews, George Reid. The Afro-Argentines of Buenos Aires, 1800-1900. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1980. 3436. *Campanha Caballero, Ernesto. “La población esclava en ciudades puerto del Rio de la Plata: Montevideo y Buenos Aires,” in Associação Brasileira de Estudos Populacionais (ABEP), ed., História da população: estudos sobre a América Latina (São Paulo: Fundação Sistema Estadual de Análise de Dados, 1990), pp. 218-25. 3437. Chace, Russell Edward, Jr. “The African Impact on Colonial Argentina” (PhD diss., University of California, Santa Barbara, 1969). 3438. Diggs, Irene. “The Negro in the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata,” Journal of Negro History, 36, 3 (1951), pp. 281-301. 3439. Doucet, Gaston Gabriel. “Sobre cautivos de guerra y esclavos indios en el Tucumán: notas en torno a un fichero documental salteño del siglo XVIII,” Revista de historia del derecho, 16, 1 (1988), pp. 59-152. 3440. Flichman, Marta B. Goldberg de, and Laura Beatriz Jany. “Algunos problemas referentes a la situación del esclavo en el Río de la Plata,” IV Congreso Internacional de Historia de América (Buenos Aires, 1966), vol. 6, pp. 61-75. 246 3441. Garcia, Emanuel Soares da Veiga. “Sôbre os serviços portuários de Buenos Aires na primeira metade do século XVIII,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 373-84. 3442. Garzón Maceda, Ceferino, and José Walter Dorflinger. “Esclavos y mulatos en un dominio rural del siglo XVIII en Córdoba: contribución a la demografía histórica,” Revista de la Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, 2nd ser., 2 (1961), pp. 627-40. 3443. Goldberg, Marta B. “La población negra y mulata de la ciudad de Buenos Aires, 1810-1840,” Desarrollo económico, 16 (no. 61) (1976), pp. 75-99. 3444. González Arzac, Alberto Ricardo. La esclavitud en la Argentina. Buenos Aires: Editorial Polémica, 1974. 3445. Guy, Onna J. “White Slavery, Public Health, and the Socialist Position on Legalized Prostitution in Argentina, 1913-1936,” Latin American Research Review, 23, 3 (1988), pp. 60-80. 3446. Johnson, Lyman L. “La manumisión de esclavos en Buenos Aires durante el Virreinato,” Desarrollo económico, 16 (no. 63) (1976), pp. 333-48. 3447. Johnson, Lyman L. “La manumisión en el Buenos Aires colonial: un análisis ampliado,” Desarrollo económico, 17 (no. 68) (1978), pp. 637-46. 3448. Johnson, Lyman L. “Manumission in Colonial Buenos Aires, 1776-1810,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 59, 2 (1979), pp. 258-79. 3449. Lopez, Nelly Beatriz. “La esclavitud en Córdoba, 1790-1853” (Thesis, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, 1972). 3450. Masini Calderón, José Luís. “La esclavitud negra en la República Argentina Epoca independiente,” Revista de la Junta de estudios historicos de Mendoza (Argentina), ser. 2, 1, 1 (1961), pp. 135-6l. 3451. Masini Calderón, José Luís. La esclavitud negra en Mendoza: época independiente. Mendoza: D’Accurzio, 1962. 3452. Massini Ezcurra, José M. “Redhibitoria y esclavos en el Río de la Plata,” Archivo Iberoamericano de historia de la medicina y antropología médica (Madrid), 13 (1961), pp. 213-26. 3453. Mayo, Carlos A. “Iglesia y esclavitud en el Río de la Plata: el caso de la Orden Betlemita (1748-1822),” Revista de historia de America, no. 102 (1986), pp. 91-102. 3454. Reichel, Heloisa Jochims. “O negro escravo e o negro liberto numa época de transição: o caso da Província de Buenos Aires,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 253-62. 3455. *Rodríguez Molas, Ricardo. “El negro en el Río de la Plata,” Polémica, 2 (l970), pp. 38-56. 3456. Rodríguez Molas, Ricardo. “Algunos aspectos del negro en la sociedad rioplatense del siglo XVIII,” Anuario del Instituto de investigaciones históricas (Rosario), 3 (1958), pp. 81-106. 247 3457. Rodríguez Molas, Ricardo. “Esclavos indios y africanos en los primeros momentos de la conquista y colonización del Río de la Plata,” Ibero-Amerikanisches Archiv, 7, 4 (1981), pp. 325-66. 3458. Saguier, Eduardo R. “La naturaleza estipendiataria de la esclavitud urbana colonial: el caso de Buenos Aires en el siglo XVIII,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 15, 2 (1989), pp. 315-25. 3459. Zavala, Silvio. “Esclavitud indígena en los comienzos de la colonización del Rio de la Plata,” Bulletin de l’Institut historique belge de Rome, 44 (1974), pp. 65162. Republished in Miscellanea offerts à Charles Verlinden (Ghent, 1975), pp. 651-62. 3460. Zavalía Matienzo, Roberto. “La esclavitud en Tucumán después de la asamblea de 1813,” Investigaciones y ensayos (Buenos Aires), 14 (1973), pp. 295-323. 3461. Zuluaga, Rosa Mercedes. “La trata de negros en la región cuyana durante el siglo XVII,” Revista de la Junta de estudios históricos de Mendoza, ser. 2, 6, l (1970), pp. 39-66. 12. Uruguay 3462. Altezor, Carlos. “Esclavitud urbana y tipologias habitacionales en Montevideo,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 17-27. 3463. Carvalho Neto, Paulo de. El negro uruguayo; hasta la abolición. Quito: Editorial Universitaria, 1965. 3464. Cicalese, Vicente O. Los esclavos del sacramento: la Archicofradía del Santísimo Sacramento de la Catedral Metropolitana. Montevideo: CBA, 1983. 3465. Diaz de Guerra, Maria A. Documentación relativa a esclavos en el Departamento de Maldonado: siglos XVIII y XIX. Montevideo: IMCO, 1983. 3466. Isola, Ema. La esclavitud en el Uruguay desde sus comienzos hasta su extinción, 1743-1852. Montevideo, 1975. 3467. Martinez Montero, Homero. “La esclavitud en el Uruguay: contribución a su estudio historico-social: Capitulo I. De la esclavitud en general,” Revista nacional (Montevideo), 3 (no. 32) (1940), pp. 261-73. 3468. Martinez Montero, Homero. “La esclavitud en el Uruguay: Capitulo III. El esclavo en la vida publica,” Revista nacional (Montevideo), 4 (no. 45) (1941), pp. 396-425. 3469. Martinez Montero, Homero. “La esclavitud en el Uruguay: Capitulo IV. El esclavo en la vida privada,” Revista nacional (Montevideo), 5 (no. 57) (1942), pp. 403-15. 3470. Martinez Montero, Homero. “La esclavitud en el Uruguay: Capitulo V. Influencia social de la esclavitud,” Revista nacional (Montevideo), 5 (no. 57) (1942), pp. 415-28. 3471. O’Gorman, Edmundo, ed. “Un matrimonio de esclavos,” Boletin del Archivo General de la Nación (Uruguay), 6 (1935), pp. 541-56. 3472. Pereda Valdés, Ildefonso. El negro en la epopeya artiguista. Montevideo: Barreiro y Ramos, 1964. 248 3473. Pereda Valdés, Ildefonso. El negro en el Uruguay, pasado y presente. Montevideo, 1965. Also as Revista del Instituto histórico y geográfico del Uruguay, vol. 25. 3474. Pereda Valdés, Ildefonso. El negro rioplatense, y otros ensayos. Montevideo: C. García, 1937. 3475. Pereda Valdés, Ildefonso. “Negros esclavos, pardos libres y negros libres en Uruguay,” Estudios afrocubanos, 4, 1-4 (1940), pp. 121-27. 3476. Pereda Valdés, Ildefonso. Negros esclavos y negros libres: esquema de una sociedad esclavista y aporte del negro en nuestra formación nacional. Montevideo: Imprenta “Gaceta Comercial”, 1941. 3477. Petit Muñoz, Eugenio, Edmundo M. Narancio, and José M. Traibel Nelcis. La condición jurídica, social, económica y política de los negros durante el coloniaje en la Banda Oriental. Montevideo: Tall. Gráf. “33”, 1947. 3478. Rama, Carlos M. “Los Afro-uruguayos,” Cahiers du monde hispanique et luso-brésilien, 11 (1968), pp. 53-109. 3479. Rama, Carlos M. Los afro-uruguayos. Montevideo: El Siglo Ilustrado, 1967. 3480. Williams, John Hoyt. “Observations on Blacks and Bondage in Uruguay, 19001936,” Americas, 43, 4 (1987), pp. 411-27. 13. Paraguay 3481. Carvalho Neto, Paulo de. “Antología del negro paraguayo,” Anales de la Universidad Central del Ecuador, 91 (no. 346) (1962), pp. 37-66. 3482. Cooney, Jerry W. “Abolition in the Republic of Paraguay, 1840-1870,” Jahrbuch für Geschichte von Staat, Wirtschaft, und Gesellschaft Lateinamerikas, 11 (1974), pp. 149-66. 3483. Plá, Josefina. “La esclavitud en el Paraguay: el rescate del esclavo,” Revista paraguaya de sociología, ll (no. 31) (1974), pp. 29-49. 3484. Plá, Josefina. Hermano negro: la esclavitud en el Paraguay. Madrid: Paraninfo, 1972. 3485. Williams, John Hoyt. “Black Labor and State Ranches: The Tabapí Experience in Paraguay,” Journal of Negro History, 62, 4 (1977), pp. 378-89. 3486. Williams, John Hoyt. “Esclavos y pobladores: observaciones sobre la historia parda del Paraguay en el siglo XIX,” Revista paraguaya de la sociología, 11 (no. 31) (1974), pp. 7-27. 3487. Williams, John Hoyt. “Paraguay’s Nineteenth Century Estancias de la Republica,” Agricultural History, 47, 3 (1973), pp. 206-15. 3488. Williams, John Hoyt. “Tevegó on the Paraguayan Frontier: A Chapter in the Black History of the Americas,” Journal of Negro History, 56, 4 (1971), pp. 272-83. IV. BRAZIL l. General and Comparative 249 3489. Abranches, Dunshee de. O captiveiro: memórias. Rio de Janeiro: Jornal do Comércio, 1941. 3490. “(Bibliografia) Açúcar -- mão-de-obra escrava,” Brasil açucareiro, 83, 1 (1974), pp. 68-70. 3491. Albuquerque, Arcy Tenório Cavalcante de. A Maçonaria e a libertação dos escravos: a abolição da escravatura, uma grandiosa vitória da Maçonaria. Rio de Janeiro: Gráfica Editora Aurora, 1970. 3492. Albuquerque, Manoel Maurício de. “A propósito de rebelião e trabalho escravo,” Encontros com a civilização brasileira (Rio de Janeiro), 5 (1978), pp. 79-90. 3493. Alencastro, Luiz-Felipe de. “Foco na escravidão (review essay: Cardoso, Escravo ou camponês?, Azevedo, Crime e escravidão, Machado, Onda negra, medo branco, and Azevedo, Escravos negros),” Veja (17 Feb. 1988), pp. 72-75. *Also “Foco na escravidão (review essay: Cardoso, Escravo ou camponês?, Azevedo, Crime e escravidão, Machado, Onda negra, medo branco, and Alúsio de Almeida, “O escravo Generoso mata a Sousa Freire [in ‘Crónica policial de Sorocaba’]),” Investigações, 2 (no. 15), pp. 73-74. 3494. Alves, Castro (ed. Afrânio Peixoto). Os escravos (Edição facsimilar). Rio de Janeiro: Francisco Alves, 1988. From Obras completas de Castro Alves (Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo: Francisco Alves, 1921), 2 vols. 3495. Alves, Henrique L. Bibliografia afro-brasileira: estudos sobre o negro. São Paulo: Edições H., 1976. 3496. Alves, Henrique L. “Taunay e o levantamento histórico do negro no Brasil,” Revista do Arquivo municipal (São Paulo), 40 (no. 189) (1977), pp. 51-61. 3497. Alves, João Luis. “A questão do elemento servil: a extinção do tráfico e a lei de represão de 1850: liberdade dos nascituros,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico brasileiro (tomo especial: 1o Congresso de História Nacional, Rio de Janeiro, 1914), parte 4, pp. 187257. 3498. Alves, Valter. “Síntese histórica da escravidão no Brasil,” Revista do Instituto geográfico e histórico da Bahia, 73 (1946), pp. 247-55. 3499. Amaral, Amadeu. “A literatura da escravidão,” Revista do Brasil (29), ano 3 (1918), pp. 43-60. 3500. Amaral, Braz do. “As tribus negras importadas: estudo etnographico, sua distribuição regional no Brasil: os grandes mercados de escravos,” Revista do Instituto geográfico e histórico da Bahia, no. 410 (1915), pp. 39-72. Reprinted as “As tribus negras importadas: estudo etnográfico, sua distribuição regional no Brasil,” in Leonardo Dantas Silva, ed., Estudos sobre a escravidão negra: 1 (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Editora Massangana, 1988), pp. 39-74. 3501. Amaral, Braz do. “Os grandes mercados de escravos africanos - As tribus importadas - Sua distribuição regional,” Annaes do 1 Congresso International de História da America (Rio de Janeiro, 1922) (Rio de Janeiro: Imprensa Nacional, 1925-30), vol. 5, pp. 435-96. 250 Also in idem, Fatos da Vida do Brazil (Bahia: Tip. Naval, 1941), pp. 89-167. 3502. Andrada e Silva, Paulo de. “O libelo de José Bonifácio contra a escravatura e o trabalho servil,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. l, pp. 490-516. 3503. Andrade, Nair de. “Musicalidade do escravo negro no Brasil,” in Freyre, et al., Novos estudos afro-brasileiros, pp. 194-202. 3504. Aragão, Raimundo Batista. Escravidão e abolicionismo. Fortaleza: IOCE, 1988. 3505. Araújo, Carlos da Silva. “Como o Doutor Chernoviz viu a escravidão no Brasil (1840-1841),” Revista de história e arte, 3-4 (1963), pp. 80-83. 3506. Ascoli, Haroldo Renato. “A escravidão e sua abolição no Brasil,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico de São Paulo, 34, (1938), pp. 109-43. 3507. Azevedo, Célia Maria Marinho de. “Batismo da liberdade: os abolicionistas e o destino do negro,” História: questões e debates (Associação paranaense de história - APAH), 9, no. 16 (1988), pp. 38-65. 3508. Azevedo, Célia Maria [Marinho] de. Onda negra, medo branco: o negro no imaginário das elites do século XIX. Rio de Janeiro: Paz e Terra, 1987. 3509. Azevedo, Paulo Cesar de, and Maurício Lissovsky, eds. Escravos brasileiros do século XIX na fotografia de Christiano Jr. São Paulo: Ex-Libris, 1988. Text by Jacob Gorender, Manuela Carneiro da Cunha, and Muniz Sodré. 3510. Balhana, Altiva P. “A família escrava no Brasil,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 1516. 3511. Balmes, Jaime Luciano. A igreja católica em face da escravidão. Trañs. José G. M. Orsini. Addendum by José Geraldo Vidigal de Carvalho: A igreja e a escravidão no Brasil. São Paulo: Centro Brasileiro de Fomento Cultural, 1988. 3512. Bandecchi, Brasil. “Legislação básica sôbre a escravidão africana no Brasil,” Revista de história, 23 (no. 89) (1972), pp. 207-14. 3513. Bandeira de Mello, Afonso Toledo. “A escravidão - da supressão do tráfico à Lei Aurea,” Annaes do 1 Congresso Internacional de História da America (Rio de Janeiro, 1922) (Rio de Janeiro: Imprensa Nacional, 1925-30), vol. 3, pp. 379-406. 3514. Bandeira de Mello, Afonso Toledo. O trabalho servil no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Departamento de Estatística e Publicidade, 1936. 3515. Bandeira, Maria de Lourdes. Território negro em espaço branco: estudo antropológico de Vila Bela. São Paulo: Editora Brasiliense, 1990. 3516. Barros de Castro, António. “As mãos e os pés do senhor de engenho,” in Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro, coord., Trabalho escravo, economia, e sociedade: Conferência sobre história e ciências sociais, UNICAMP (Rio de Janeiro: Paz e Terra, 1983), pp. 41-66. With commentaries, Eduardo de Oliveira e Oliveira, pp. 69-72, Gervásio Castro de Resende, pp. 72-76, Fernando A. Novais, pp. 76-80, João Manuel Cardoso de Mello, pp. 80-83, and response, pp. 84-87. 251 3517. Barros, Jacy Rêgo. Senzala e mocumba. Rio de Janeiro: Rodrigues e Cia., 1939. 3518. Bastide, Roger. “The Other Quilombos,” selection (from Les religions africaines au Brésil [Paris: Presses Universitaires de Paris, 1960]) Translated in Price, ed., Maroon Societies, pp. 49-59. 3519. Beiguelman, Paula. A crise do escravismo e a grande imigração. 2nd ed. São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1981. 3520. Beiguelman, Paula. “The Destruction of Modern Slavery: The Brazilian Case,” Review, 6, 3 (1983), pp. 305-20. 3521. Beiguelman, Paula. “O encaminhamento político do problema da escravidão no Império,” in Sérgio Buarque de Holanda, ed., História geral da civilização brasileira (São Paulo: DIFEL, 1969), tomo II, vol. 3, pp. 189-219. 3522. Beiguelman, Paula. “A organização política do Brasil: império e a sociedade agrária escravista,” Estudos econômicos (special issue), 15 (1985), pp. 7-16. 3523. Benci, S. I., Jorge. Economia cristã dos senhores no governo dos escravos (livro brasileiro de 1700). Porto: Livraria Apostolado de Imprensa, 1954. 3524. Beozzo, José Oscar. “A política de reprodução da mão-de-obra escrava,” Vozes (Revista católica de cultura) (Petrópolis), 74, 1 (1980), pp. 49-54. 3525. Blair, Thomas. “Mouvements afro-brésiliens de libération depuis la période esclavagiste jusqu’à nos jours,” Présence africaine, 53 (1965), pp. 96-101. 3526. Boletim do Centenário (da Abolição e República) (Rio de Janeiro, no. 1, March 1987 - ). 3527. Boxer, Charles R. “Negro Slavery in Brazil: A Portuguese Pamphlet (1764),” Race, 5, 3 (1964), pp. 38-47. 3528. Boxer, Charles R. Race Relations in the Portuguese Colonial Empire, 1415-1825. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1963. 3529. Braga, Julio Santana. “Anciens esclaves brésiliens au Dahomey,” Etudes dahoméennes, 17 (1970), pp. 91-98. 3530. *Brancato, Sandra. “A abolição da escravatura no Brasil segundo a correspondência diplomática espanhola” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990) 3531. Brandão, Guilherme Euclides. “The Colonial Slave Mode of Production in Brazil” (PhD diss., American University, 1979). 3532. Brandão, Júlio de Freitas. “O escravo e o direito (breve abordagem históricojurídico),” in Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 255-84. 3533. Bresciani, Maria Stella Martins. “A lenda da abolição,” Anais do Museu Paulista, 29 (1979), pp. 193-200. 3534. Bruno, Ernani da Silva. “O que revelam os inventários sobre escravos e gente de serviço,” Revista do Arquivo municipal (São Paulo), 188 (1976), pp. 63-70. 252 3535. Buescu, Mircea. “Uma interpretação marxista da escravidão no Brasil (review essay: Novais, Portugal e Brasil na crise do antigo sistema colonial),” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico brasileiro, 334 (1982), pp. 183-90. 3536. Buescu, Mircea. “Natalidade e mortalidade da população escrava,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico brasileiro, no. 334 (1982), pp. 163-65. 3537. Buescu, Mircea. “Notas sôbre o custo da mão-de-obra escrava,” Verbum, 31, 3 (1975), pp. 33-44. 3538. Buescu, Mircea. “Preço de escravos no século XIX,” in História econômica do Brasil: pesquisas e análises (Rio de Janeiro: APEC, 1970), pp. 244-49. 3539. Buescu, Mircea. “Situação dos escravos no século XIX,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico brasileiro, no. 336 (1982), pp. 145-47. 3540. Calmon, Pedro. “A abolição,” Revista do Arquivo municipal (São Paulo), 47 (1938), pp. 127-46. 3541. Campos, Adalgisa Arantes. “Notas sobre os rituais de morte na sociedade escravista,” Revista brasileira de economia, 42, 2 (1988), pp. 109-22. 3542. Campos, Eduardo. Imprensa abolicionista, igreja, escravos e senhores: estudos. Fortaleza: Secretaria de Cultura e Desporto do Estado do Ceará/Banco do Nordeste do Brasil, 1984. 3543. Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S. “The Peasant Breach in the Slave System: New Developments in Brazil,” Luso-Brazilian Review, 25, 1 (1988), pp. 49-57. 3544. Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S., org., and Hebe [Maria] Mattos de Castro, João Luís Ribeiro Fragoso, and Ronaldo Vainfas. Escravidão e abolicão no Brasil: novas perspectivas. Rio de Janeiro: Jorge Zahar, 1988. 3545. Cardozo, Manoel. “Slavery in Brazil as Described by Americans,” Americas, 17, 3 (1961), pp. 241-60. 3546. Carmargo de Villegas, Maria Zelia. “Introducción de la mano de obra libre en el sistema esclavista brasilero,” Mundo nuevo: revista de estudios latinoamericanos, 12, 1 (no. 43) (1989), pp. 62-95. 3547. Carneiro, Edison. Ladinos e crioulos: estudos sôbre o negro no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasileira, 1964. 3548. *Carneiro, Edison. “Singularidades dos quilombos,” in idem, Ladinos e crioulos: estudos sobre o negro no Brasil (Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasileira, 1964), pp. 26-36. 3549. Carvalho, (Cônego) José Geraldo Vidigal de. A escravidão: convergências e divergências. Viçosa: Editora Folha de Viçosa, 1988. 3550. Carvalho, (Cônego) José Geraldo Vidigal de. A igreja e a escravidão: uma análise documental. Rio de Janeiro: Presença, 1987. 3551. Carvalho, (Cônego) José Geraldo Vidigal de. “Os conjurados de 1789 e a escravidão,” Revista de história (São Paulo), 119 (1985-88), pp. 91-99. 3552. Carvalho, José Murilo de. “Escravidão e razão nacional,” Dados (Revista de ciências sociais), 31, 3 (1988), pp. 287-308. 253 3553. Carvalho, Rodrigues de. “Aspectos da influencia africana na formação social do Brasil,” in Freyre, et al., Novos estudos afro-brasileiros, pp. 17-76. 3554. Carvalho Neto, Paulo de. “Notícia sobre uma coleção inédita de documentos afro-brasileiros,” Revista de história (São Paulo), 50 (1974), pp. 705-09. 3555. Casadei, Thalita de Oliveira. “Antonio, escravo do Visconde de Caravelas,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 5, 2 (1974), pp. 23-24. 3556. Casadei, Thalita de Oliveira. “Autoridade policial e o escravo,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 9, 6 (no. 102) (1978), pp. 11-14. 3557. Castro, António Barros de. “A autonomia do sistema escravista,” Cadernos de debate: história do Brasil, no. 1 (1976), pp. 71-73. 3558. Castro, Antônio Barros de. “A economia política, o capitalismo, e a escravidão,” in José Roberto do Amaral Lapa, org., Modos de produção e realidade brasileira (Petrópolis: Vozes, 1980), pp. 67-107. 3559. *Castro, Antônio Barros de. “Escravos e senhores nos engenhos do Brasil” (PhD diss., Universidade de Campinas, Brazil, 1976). 3560. Castro, Antônio Barros de. “Escravos e senhores nos engenhos do Brasil: um estudo sobre os trabalhos do açúcar e a política econômica dos senhores,” Estudos econômicos, 7, 1 (1977), pp. 177-220. 3561. *Castro, Antônio Barros de. “Organização social e económica da escravidão” (Unpublished paper presented to the Confêrencia sobre história e ciências sociais, Campinas, 1975). 3562. Castro, Hebe Maria Mattos de. Ao sul da história: lavradores pobres na crise do trabalho escravo. São Paulo: Editora Brasiliense, 1987. 3563. Castro, Hebe Maria Mattos de. “Beyond Masters and Slaves: Subsistence Agriculture as Survival Strategy in Brazil during the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 68, 3 (1988), pp. 461-89. Reprinted in Rebecca J. Scott, Seymour Drescher, idem, George Reid Andrews, and Robert M. Levine, eds., The Abolition of Slavery and the Aftermath of Emancipation in Brazil (Durham: Duke University Press, 1988), pp. 55-83. 3564. *Castro, Hebe Maria Mattos de. “A margem da história (homens livres pobres e pequena produção na crise do trabalho escravo)” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Federal Fluminense, 1985). 3565. Castro, Hélio Oliveira Portocarrero de. “Viabilidade econômica da escravidão no Brasil, 1880-1888,” Revista brasileira de economia, 27, 1 (1973), pp. 43-67. 3566. Castro, Jeanne Berrance de. “O negro na Guarda Nacional brasileira,” Anais do Museu Paulista, 23 (1969), pp. 149-72. 3567. Cavalcanti, Povina. “A república negra,” Revista do Brasil (São Paulo), 1a fase, vol. 17 (no. 68) (1921), pp. 395-98. 3568. César, José Vicente. “Situação legal do Indio durante o periodo colonial, 15001822,” América indígena (Mexico), 45, 2 (1985), pp. 391-425. 254 3569. Chaia, Josephina, and Luis Lisanti. “O escravo na legislação brasileira (18081889),” Revista de história, 49 (no. 99) (1974), pp. 241-48. Reprinted in Subsídios para o estudo da abolição (Recife: Editora Massangana, 1983), pp. 9-18. 3570. Chalhoub, Sidney. Visões da liberdade: uma história das últimas décadas da escravidão na Corte. São Paulo: Companhia das Letras, 1990. 3571. Chalhoub, Sidney. “Visões de liberdade: senhores, escravos e abolicionistas da Corte nas últimas décadas da escravidão,” História: questões e debates (Associação paranaense de história - APAH), 9, no. 16 (1988), pp. 5-37. 3572. Chiavenatto, Julio José. O negro no Brasil da senzala à Guerra do Paraguai. São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1980. 2nd ed. São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1986. 3573. Cláudio, Af[f]onso. “As tribus negras importadas: estudo etnográfico, sua distribuição regional no Brasil,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico brasileiro (tomo especial: 1o Congresso de Historia Nacional, Rio de Janeiro, 1914), parte 2, pp. 595-657. 3574. Coelho de Senna, Nelson. Africanos no Brasil. Belo Horizonte: Queiroz Breyner, 1938. 3575. Colaço, Thais L. “O escravo no Carnaval da cidade de Nossa Senhora do Desterro no século XIX,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 129-32. 3576. Colson, R. Frank. “European Investment and the Brazilian ‘Boom’, 1886-1892: The Roots of Speculation,” Ibero-amerikanisches Archiv, 9, 3-4 (1983), pp. 401-13. 3577. 1o Congresso Afro-brasileiro do Recife (1934). Trabalhos, 2 vols. See Estudos afrobrasileiros (vol. l) and Novos estudos afro-brasileiros (vol. 2), Freyre, et al. 3578. Conrad, Robert. “The Brazilian Slave,” in Lewis Hanke, ed., History of Latin American Civilization: Sources and Interpretations (Boston: Little, Brown, 1967), vol. 2, pp. 20613. 3579. Conrad, Robert. Brazilian Slavery: An Annotated Research Bibliography. Boston: G. K. Hall, 1977. 3580. Conrad, Robert [Edgar]. Children of God’s Fire: A Documentary History of Black Slavery in Brazil. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1983. 3581. Conrad, Robert. The Destruction of Brazilian Slavery, 1850-1888. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972. 3582. Conrad, Robert. “Neither Slave nor Free: The Emancipados of Brazil, 1818-1868,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 53, 1 (1973), pp. 50-70. 3583. Conrad, Robert. “Nineteenth-Century Brazilian Slavery,” in Toplin, ed., Slavery and Race Relations in Latin America, pp. 146-75. 3584. Correa do Lago, Luiz Aranha. “The Transition from Slave to Free Labor in Agriculture in the Southern and Coffee Regions of Brazil: A Global and Theoretical Approach and Regional Case Studies” (PhD diss., Harvard University, 1978). 255 3585. Costa, Emilia Viotti da. “Da escravidão ao trabalho livre,” in idem, Da monarquia à República: Momentos decisivos (São Paulo: Grijalbo, 1977), pp. 209-26. Translated as “Masters and Slaves: From Slave Labor to Free Labor,” in idem The Brazilian Empire: Myths and Histories (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985), pp. 125-71’. 3586. Costa, Emilia Viotti da. Da senzala à colonia. São Paulo: Difusão Européia do Livro, 1966. 3587. *Costa, Emilia Viotti da. “Escravidão nas áreas cafeeiras: aspectos econômicos, sociais e ideológicos da desagregação do sistema escravista” (São Paulo: Faculdade de Filosofia e Ciências e Letras, 1964). 3588. Costa, Emilia Viotti da. “O escravo na grande lavoura,” in Sérgio Buarque de Holanda, ed., História geral da civilização brasileira (São Paulo: DIFEL, 1969), tomo II, vol. 3, pp. 135-88. 3589. Costa, Emilia Viotti da. “Sharecroppers and Plantation Owners: An Experiment with Free Labor,” in idem, The Brazilian Empire: Myths and Histories (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985). pp. 94-124. 3590. Costa Filho, Miguel. “Quilombos,” Estudos sociais, 3, 7 (1960), pp. 334-60; 9 (1960), pp. 95-109; 10 (1961), pp. 233-47. 3591. Costa, Iraci del Nero da. “Os viajantes estrangeiros e a família escrava no Brasil,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 17-30. 3592. Costa, Iraci del Nero da, and Robert W. Slenes. “Nota sobre algunos elementos estructurales de la familiar esclava brasileña,” HISLA: Revista latinoamericana de historia economica y social, ll, 1 (1988), pp. 3-11. 3593. Couceiro, Solange Martins. Bibliografia sôbre o negro brasileiro. São Paulo: Universidade de São Paulo, 1971. 3594. Coutinho, Ruy. “Alimentação e estado nutricional do escravo no Brasil,” in Estudos afro-brasileiros (1o Congresso Afro-Brasileiro, Recife, 1934) (Rio de Janeiro, 1935), pp. 199-213. 3595. Cunha, Ciro Vieira da. No tempo de Patrocínio. São Paulo: Saraiva, 1960. 3596. Cunha, Manuela Carneiro da. Negros estrangeiros: os escravos libertos e sua volta à África. São Paulo: Editora Brasiliense, 1985. 3597. Cunha, Manuela Carneiro da. “‘On the Amelioration of Slavery’ by Henry Koster,” Slavery and Abolition, 11, 3 (1990), pp. 368-403. 3598. Cunha, Manuela Carneiro da. “Sobre a servidão voluntária: outro discurso. Escravidão e contrato no Brasil colonial,” in idem, Antropologia do Brasil: mito, história, etnicidade (São Paulo: Editora Brasiliense, 1986), pp. 145-58. Reprinted in Dedalo (Museu de Arte e Arqueologia de São Paulo), 23 (1984), pp. 5766. 256 3599. Cunha, Manuela Carneiro da. “Sobre os silêncios da lei: lei costumeira e positiva nas alforrias de escravos no Brasil do século XIX,” Cadernos IFCH/UNICAMP (Instituto de filosofia e Ciências Humanas, Universidade Estadual de Campinas), 4 (1983), pp. 1-27. Reprinted in Dados: revista de ciências sociais (Rio de Janeiro), 28, 1 (1985), pp. 45-60; also in idem, Antropologia do Brasil: mito, história, etnicidade (São Paulo: Editora Brasiliense, 1986), pp. 123-44. Translated as “Silences of the Law: Customary Law and Positive Law on the Manumission of Slaves in the 19th Century Brazil,” History and Anthropology, 1, 2 (1985), pp. 427-43. 3600. Daeleman, Jan, S.J. “African Origins of Brazilian Black Slaves: Linguistic Criteria,” Mankind Quarterly, 23, 1 (1982), pp. 98-118. 3601. Daglione, Vivaldo W. F. “A libertação dos escravos no Brasil através de alguns documentos,” Anais de história, 1 (1968-69), pp. 131-34. 3602. D’Almeida, José Evaristo. O escravo. Linda-a-Velha: Edições ALAC, 1989. 3603. “Demografia da escravidão” (Special issue of Estudos econômicos, 17, 2 [1988]). For contents see Costa, Slenes and Schwartz, Eisenberg, Fragoso and Florentino, Gutiérrez, Metcalf, and Slenes. 3604. *Dias, Carlos A. “O indígena e o invasor: a confrontação dos povos indígenas do Brasil com o invasor europeu, nos séculos XVI e XVII,” Encontros com a civilização brasileira (Rio de Janeiro), 28 (1981), pp. 201-55. 3605. Dias, Maria Odila da Silva. “Nas fímbrias da escravidão urbana: negras de tabuleiro e de ganho,” Estudos econômicos (special issue), 15 (1985), pp. 89-109. 3606. Dornas [Filho], João. A escravidão no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Civilização, 1939. 3607. Duque-Estrada, Osório. A abolição (esboço histórico) 1831-1888. Rio de Janeiro: Leite Ribeiro e Maurillo, 1918. 3608. Dutra, Eliana Regina de Freitas, Douglas Cole Libby, and Sheila Brandão Baggio. “Das sombras do tráfico às luzes do século: notas sobre uma discussão parlamentar,” Revista brasileira de economia, 42, 2 (1988), pp. 47-68. 3609. Dutra, Francis A. “Blacks and the Search for Rewards and Status in SeventeenthCentury Brazil,” Proceedings of the Pacific Coast Council on Latin American Studies, 6 (1977-79), pp. 25-35. 3610. Eads, J. K. “The Negro in Brazil,” Journal of Negro History, 21, 4 (1936), pp. 36575. 3611. Egas, Eugênio. “Libertação dos escravos (1871-1888 - síntese),” in Anais do 3 Congresso Sul-Riograndense de História e Geografia (Porto Alegre, 1940), vol. 4, pp. 2017-29. Reprinted in Revista do Instituto arqueológico, histórico e geográfico pernambucano, 40 (1945), pp. 226-40. 3612. Einaar, J. F. E. “Abschaffing van de Slavernij in Brazilie,” West-Indische Gids, 34 (1953), pp. 56-58. With English summary. 257 3613. Eisenberg, Peter L. “O escravo e o proletário,” in Anais da semana de estudos de história agraria de 19 a 23 de maio de 1980 (Assis: Universidade Estadual Paulista, Instituto de Letras, História e Psicologia de Assis, 1982), pp. 31-62. Also as “Escravo e proletário na história do Brasil,” Estudos econômicos, 13, 1 (1983), pp. 55-69. 3614. Eisenberg, Peter L. “Slavery and Modes of Production in Brazil (review essay: Gorender, Escravismo colonial, and Martins, Cativeiro da terra),” Latin American Perspectives, 7, 1 (no. 24) (1980), pp. 89-92. 3615. Elias, Maria José. “Os debates sôbre o trabalho dos chins e o problema da mãode-obra no Brasil durante o século XIX,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 697-716. 3616. Elias, Maria José. “O problema da mão-de-obra numa perspectiva histórica: uma reflexão de a Transumância amazônica,” Anais do Museu Paulista, 29 (1979), pp. 183-92. 3617. Ellis, Myriam. “Escravos e assalariados na antiga pesca da baleia (Um capítulo esquecido da história do trabalho no Brasil colonial),” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. l, pp. 307-52. 3618. Estudos econômicos, 17, 1 (no. especial) (1987), special number: “O protesto escravo I”. For contents see Carvalho, Mott, Moura, Queiroz, and Reis and Schwartz. 3619. Estudos econômicos, 17, 2 (no. especial) (1988), special number: “Demografia da escravidão”. For contents see Costa, Slenes and Schwartz, Eisenberg, Fragoso and Florentino, Gutiérrez, Metcalf, and Slenes. 3620. Estudos econômicos, 18 (no. especial) (1988), special number: “O protesto escravo II”. For contents see Algranti, Bakos, Gebara, Graf, Guimãraes, Gutiérrez, Machado, and Oliveira. 3621. *Falconi, Ivaldo. “Um quilombo esquecido,” Correio das Artes (1949). 3622. Fenelon, Dea Ribeiro. “Levantamento e sistematização da legislação relativa aos escravos no Brasil,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 2, pp. 199-307. 3623. Fernandes, Florestan. “Slaveholding Society in Brazil,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 311-42. 3624. Fernandes, Florestan. “The Weight of the Past,” Daedalus, 96 (1967), pp. 560-79. 3625. Flory, Thomas. “Fugitive Slaves and Free Society: The Case of Brazil,” Journal of Negro History, 64, 2 (1979), pp. 116-30. 3626. Flory, Thomas. “Race and Social Control in Independent Brazil,” Journal of Latin American Studies, 9, 2 (1977), pp. 199-224. 258 3627. Fonseca, Célia Freire d’Aquino. “O Brasil oitocentista e a abolição (Estrutura, população e abolição),” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 739-60. 3628. Fonseca, Célia Freire d’Aquino. “Comentários sôbre o projeto de libertação dos escravos, elaborado por José Bonifácio em 1823,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 517-20. 3629. Fonseca, Edson Nery da, ed. Casa-grande e senzala e a crítica brasileira de 1933 a 1944: Artigos reunidos e comentados. Recife: Companhia Editora de Pernambuco, 1985. 3630. *Franco, Maria Sylvia de Carvalho. “Organização social do trabalho no período colonial,” in Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro, coord. Trabalho escravo, economia, e sociedade: Conferência sobre história e ciências sociais, UNICAMP (Rio de Janeiro: Paz e Terra, 1983), pp. 143-92. With commentaries, Carlos Vogt, pp. 195-99, Juarez Rubens Brando Lopes, pp. 199-204, Caio Navarro de Toledo, pp. 204-08, Kalman Silvert, pp. 209-14, Fausto Alvim Junior, pp. 214-18, and response, pp. 219-29. 3631. Freire, João Ricardo Bessa. Dialética e escravidão. Rio de Janeiro: Achiamé, 1988. 3632. Freitas, Décio. Escravidão de índios e negros no Brasil. Porto Alegre: Escola Superior de Teologia São Lourenço de Brindes/Editora Vozes, 1980. 3633. Freitas, Décio. O escravismo brasileiro. Porto Alegre: Escola Superior de Teologia São Lourenço de Brindes/Editora Vozes, 1980. 3634. Freitas, Décio. Escravos e senhores-de-escravos. Porto Alegre: Caxias do Sul, 1977. 3635. Freitas, Décio. Insurreições escravas. Porto Alegre: Movimento, 1975. 3636. Freitas Filho, Almir Pita. “Tecnologia e escravidão no Brasil: aspectos da modernização agrícola nas Exposições Nacionais da segunda metade do século XIX (18611881),” História hoje: balanço e perspectivas (IV Encontro regional da Associação nacional dos professores universitários de história, Núcleo do Rio de Janeiro, 16-19 oct. de 1990) (Rio de Janeiro: ANPUH-RJ, 1990), pp. 37-39. 3637. Freitas, Octavio de. Doenças africanas no Brasil. São Paulo: Editora Nacional, 1935. 3638. Freyre, Gilberto. “Antecedentes da escravidão no Brasil,” Revista do Instituto arqueológico, histórico e geográphico pernambucano, 39 (1944), pp. 283-85. 3639. Freyre, Gilberto. Casa-grande e senzala. Rio de Janeiro: Olympio, 1933. Translated as The Masters and the Slaves: A Study in the Development of Brazilian Civilization (trans. Samuel Putnam) (New York: Knopf, 1946). Also translated as Herrenhaus und Sklavenhütte: Ein Bild der brasilianischen Gesellschaft (trans. Ludwig Graf von Schönfeldt) (Munich: Deutsches Taschenbuch, 1990). 3640. Freyre, Gilberto. “Deformações de corpo dos negros fugidos,” in Freyre, et al., Novos estudos afro-brasileiros, pp. 245-50. 3641. Freyre, Gilberto. O escravo nos anúncios de jornais brasileiros do século XIX. Recife: Imprênsa Universitária, 1963. 2nd ed. (aumentada). São Paulo: Companhia Editora Nacional, 1979. 259 3642. Freyre, Gilberto. “O escravo nos anúncios de jornal do tempo do Império,” Lanterna verde (Boletim da Sociedade Felippe d’Oliveira, Rio de Janeiro), no. 2 (1935), pp. 732. 3643. Freyre, Gilberto, et al. Novos estudos afro-brasileiros (Trabalhos apresentados ao 1o Congresso Afro-brasileiro do Recife, vol. 2). Rio de Janeiro: Editora Civilização Brasileira, 1937. For contents see Andrade, Camargo, Carvalho, Freyre, Mello, and Pontes. 3644. Gebara, Ademir. “Escravidão: fugas e controle social,” Cadernos IFCH/UNICAMP (Instituto de filosofia e Ciências Humanas, Universidade Estadual de Campinas), 12 (1984), pp. 1-58. 3645. Gerson, Brasil. “O açoite no Brasil-Império,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo Nacional), 8, 6 (1977), pp. 3-5. 3646. Gerson, Brasil. A escravidão no Império. Rio de Janeiro: Pallas, 1975. 3647. Gerson, Brasil. “O problema da escravidão no Brasil,” Studia, 37 (1973), pp. 21724. 3648. Giacomini, Sonia Maria. Mulher e escrava: uma introdução histórica ao estudo da mulher negra no Brasil. Petrópolis: Vozes, 1988. 3649. Giacomini, Sonia Maria. “Ser escrava no Brasil,” Estudos afro-asiáticos, 15 (1988), pp. 145-70. 3650. Goldschmidt, Eliana [Maria]. “Alforrias e propriedade familiar,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 31-38. 3651. Goldschmidt, Eliana [Maria]. “As exigências eclesiásticas para o matrimônio: a especificidade quanto aos casamentos de escravos,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da II reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1983), pp. 89-91. 3652. 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Graham, Sandra Lauderdale. “Documenting Slavery (review essay: Conrad, Children of God’s Fire),” Luso-Brazilian Review, 21, 2 (1984), pp. 95-99. 3665. Graham, Sandra Lauderdale. “Slavery’s Impasse: Slave Prostitutes, Small-Time Mistresses, and the Brazilian Law of 1871,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 33, 4 (1991), pp. 669-94. 3666. Guia brasileiro de fontes para a história da África ao sul do Saara, da escravidão negra, e do negro na sociedade atual: frente arquivística. Rio de Janeiro: Arquivo nacional, Departamento de Imprensa Nacional, 1988. Vol. 1: Alagoas-Rio Grande do Sul. Vol. 2: Rio de JaneiroSergipe. 3667. Guimarães, Carlos Magno. “Os quilombos do século do ouro,” republished in Revista brasileira de economia, 42, 2 (1988), pp. 15-46. 3668. Guimarães, Dulce Maria Pamplona. Confrontos, capitulações e resistências: brancos, Índios e negros no Brasil. Franca: Faculdade de História, Direito e Serviço Social, 1987. 3669. Gutiérrez, Horácio. “A escravidão brasileira nos artigos de revistas (1976-1985) (review essay: Sant’Ana and Costa, A escravidão brasileira nos artigos de revistas),” Estudos econômicos, 18 (no. especial) (1988), pp. 185-86. 3670. Hanke, Lewis, ed. “Negro Slavery in Brazil,” in History of Latin American Civilization: Sources and Interpretations (Boston: Little, Brown, 1967), vol. 2, pp. 155-213. 3671. Hell, Jürgen. “Brasilien als Pionier des Sklavenmanufaktur in Amerika” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 3672. Hell, Jürgen. “Der brasilianische Plantagen-Komplex (1532-1808): Ein Beitrag zur Charakteristik der Sklaverei in Amerika,” Asien-Afrika-Latein-Amerika, 6 (1978), pp. 117-38. 3673. Hell, Jürgen. Sklavenmanufaktur und Sklavenemanzipation in Brasilien 1500-1888. Berlin: Zentralinstitut für Geschichte, 1986. 261 3674. Hemming, John. Red Gold: The Conquest of the Brazilian Indians, 1500-1760. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1978. 3675. Hentschke, Jens. “Abolition der Sklaverei und Errichtung der Republik in Brasilien 1888/89: Zäsur im brasilianischen bürgerlichen Revolutionszyklus,” Lateinamerika (Rostok), 1 (1988), pp. 9-28. 3676. Höner, Urs. Die Versklavung der brasilianischen Indianer: Der Arbeitsmarkt im portugiesisch Amerika im XVI. Jahrhundert. Zürich: Atlantis, 1980. 3677. Hutter, Lucy M. “O trabalho escravo versus o trabalho livre em meados do século XIX: tendências e debates,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII renião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 109-16. 3678. Ianni, Octavio. “Aspectos da formação social escravista,” in José Roberto do Amaral Lapa, org., Modos de produção e realidade brasileira (Petrópolis: Vozes, 1980), pp. 15765. 3679. Ianni, Octavio. “Capitalismo e escravidão,” Anais do Museu Paulista, 19 (1965), pp. 137-45. 3680. Ianni, Octavio. “Escravidão e história,” Debate e Crítica (Revista quadrimestral de ciências sociais), 6 (1975), pp. 131-44. 3681. Ianni, Octavio. Escravidão e racismo. São Paulo: Editora HUCITEC, 1978. 3682. Ianni, Octavio. “Escravismo e racismo,” Anais de história, 7 (1975), pp. 66-94. 3683. Ianni, Octavio. As metamorfoses do escravo. São Paulo: HUCITEC, 1988. (2a ed. rev.) 3684. Ianni, Octavio. Raças e classes sociais no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasileira, 1966. 2nd revised edition, 1972. 3685. Janotti, Maria de Lourdes Monaco. “O desafio da história oral,” Ciência hoje, 8 (no. 48, suplemento) (1988), pp. 32-35. 3686. Jurema, Aderbal. Insurreições negras no Brasil. Recife: Edições da Casa Mozart, 1935. 3687. Karasch, Mary C. “The Iconography of African Slavery in Brazil” (Unpublished paper, American Historical Association, Chicago 1991). 3688. Karasch, Mary C. “Suppliers, Sellers, Servants, and Slaves,” in Louisa S. Hoberman and Susan M. Socolow, eds., Cities and Society in Colonial Latin America (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1986), pp. 251-83. Reprinted in Howard University, Black Diaspora Committee, The Black Diaspora, pp. 152-77. 3689. *Kiple, Kenneth F. Blacks, Biology, and Brazil. Forthcoming. 3690. Kiple, Kenneth F. “The Nutritional Link with Slave Infant and Child Mortality in Brazil,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 69, 4 (1989), pp. 677-90. 3691. Klein, Herbert S. “The Colored Freedmen in Brazilian Slave Society,” Journal of Social History, 3, 1 (1969), pp. 30-52. 262 Translated as “Os homens livres de cor na sociedade escravista brasileira,” Dados: Revista de ciências sociais (Rio de Janeiro), 17 (1978), pp. 3-27. 3692. Klein, Herbert S. “Nineteenth-Century Brazil,” in Cohen and Greene, eds., Neither Slave nor Free, pp. 309-34. 3693. Kuznesof, Elizabeth. “The Domestic Situation of the Slave Family in Brazil,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 17-20. 3694. Lacombe, Américo Jacobina, Eduardo Silva, and Francisco de Assis Barbosa. Rui Barbosa e a queima dos arquivos. Rio de Janeiro: Fundação Rui Barbosa, 1988. 3695. Lago, Luiz Aranha Corrêa do. “O surgimento da escravidão e a transição para o trabalho livre no Brasil: um modelo teórico simples e uma visão de longo prazo,” Revista brasileira de economia, 42, 4 (1988), pp. 317-69. 3696. Lamounier, Maria Lúcia. Da escravidão ao trabalho livre (a lei de locação de serviços de 1879). Campinas: Papirus, 1988. 3697. *Lamounier, Maria Lúcia. “Formas de transição da escravidão ao trabalho livre: a lei de locação de serviços de 1879,” História: questões e debates (Associação paranaense de história - APAH), 5, 9 (1984), pp. 293-311. 3698. Lamounier, Maria Lúcia. “Formas de transição da escravidão ao trabalho livre: a lei de locação de serviços em 1879” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, 1986). 3699. Lara, Silvia Hunold. Inventário e legislação sobre escravos africanos no Brasil. São Paulo: n.p., 1988. 3700. Leff, Nathaniel H. “Long-Term Viability of Slavery in a Backward Closed Economy,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 5, 1 (1974), pp. 103-08. 3701. Leff, Nathaniel H., and Herbert S. Klein. “O crescimento da população não européia antes do início do desenvolvimento: O Brasil do século XIX,” Anais de história, 6 (1974), pp. 51-70. 3702. Leite, Beatriz Westin de Cerqueira. “Abolição e política: o debate parlamentar,” Revista do Instituto de estudos brasileiros, 28 (1988), pp. 9-22. 3703. Leme, Luiz António Padovani. “As origens da escravidão negra na América: uma necessidade interna,” Cadernos de pesquisa: tudo é história, no. 3 (1978), pp. 53-57. 3704. Levine, Robert M. “Faces of Brazilian Slavery: The Cartes de Visite of Christiano Júnior,” Americas, 47, 2 (1990), pp. 127-59. 3705. Levine, Robert M. “‘Turning on the Lights’: Brazilian Slavery Reconsidered One Hundred Years after Abolition,” Latin American Research Review, 24, 2 (1989), pp. 201-17. 3706. Lima, Lana Lage da Gama. Rebeldia negra e abolicionismo. Rio de Janeiro: Achiamé, 1981. 3707. *Lima, Raul. “As fontes documentais e a escravidão,” Arquivo: Boletim histórico e informativo (São Paulo), 4, 2 (1983), pp. 37-52. 263 3708. Lisanti, Luis. “Autoconsumo e economia de mercado: o papel de livres e escravos - indagações,” Anais de história, 3 (1971), pp. 159-62. 3709. Locker, Katrin. “Indianersklaverei in Brasilien” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 3710. Lopes, Edmundo Correia. A escravatura: subsídios para a sua história. Lisbon: Agência Geral das Colónias, 1944. 3711. Lopes, Luís Carlos. O espelho e a imagem: o escravo na historiografia brasileira (18081920). Rio de Janeiro: Achiamé, 1987. 3712. Loureiro, Maria Amelia Salgado. A escravatura no Brasil e o processo da abolição. São Paulo: Voz do Oeste, 1988. 3713. Luca, Tánia Regina de. “Representações do trabalho,” Ciência hoje, 8 (no. 48, suplemento) (1988), pp. 40-45. 3714. Luna, Francisco Vidal, and Iraci Nero da Costa. “A presença do elemento forro no conjunto de proprietários de escravos,” Ciência e cultura (São Paulo), 32, 7 (1980), pp. 836-41. 3715. Luna, Luiz. O negro na luta contra a escravidão. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Leitura, 1968. 3716. Macedo, Sérgio D. Teixeira de. Crónica do negro no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Distribuidora Record, 1974. 3717. Machado, Maria Helena P. T. “Em torno da autonomia escrava: uma nova direção para a história social da escravidão,” Revista brasileira de história, 8, no. 16 (1988), pp. 143-60. 3718. Machado [Filho], Aires da Mata. “A procedência dos negros brasileiros e os arquivos eclesiasticos,” Afroamérica, 1, 1-2 (1945), pp. 67-70. 3719. Maestri Filho, Mário José. “A propos du ‘quilombo’: esclavage et luttes sociales au Brésil,” Genève-Afrique, 22, 1 (1984), pp. 7-31. 3720. Maestri Filho, Mário José. Breve história da escravidão. Porto Alegre: Mercado Aberto, 1986. 3721. Maestri Filho, Mário José. “Da abolição à República: a agonia do estado escravista,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 15, 2 (1989), pp. 303-14. 3722. Maestri Filho, Mário José. Depoimentos de escravos brasileiros. São Paulo: Ícone, 1988. 3723. Maestri Filho, Mário José. “Em torno ao quilombo,” História em cadernos (Rio de Janeiro: UFRJ-IFCS, Mestrado em História), 2, 2 (1984), pp. 9-19. 3724. Maestri Filho, Mário José. A servidão negra. Porto Alegre: Mercado Aberto, 1988. 3725. Maeyama, Takashi. “The Masters versus the Slaves Under the Plantation Systems in Brazil: Some Preliminary Considerations,” Latin American Studies (University of Tsukuba, Japan), 3 (1981), pp. 115-41. 264 3726. Marchant, Alexander. From Barter to Slavery: The Economic Relations of Portuguese and Indians in the Settlement of Brazil, 1500-1800. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1942. 3727. Marcílio, Maria Luiza, Rubens Murillo Marques, and José Carlos Barreiro. “Considerações sobre o preço do escravo no período imperial, “ Anais de história, 5 (1973), pp. 179-94. 3728. Mariano, Júlio. “Um crime de escravos,” Investigações, 1 (no. 8), pp. 91-98. 3729. Martin, Percy Alvin. “A escravatura e a sua abolição no Brasil,” Anais do 3 Congresso Sul-Riograndense de História e Geografia (Porto Alegre, 1940), vol. 3, pp. 1203-38. 3730. Martin, Percy Alvin. “Slavery and Abolition in Brazil,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 13, 2 (1933), pp. 151-96. 3731. Mattoso, Kátia M. de Queirós. “A carta de alforria como fonte complementar para o estudo da rentabilidade de mão-de-obra escrava urbana (1819-1888),” in Carlos Manuel Peláez and Mircea Buescu, eds., Moderna história econômica (Rio de Janeiro: APEC, 1976), pp. 149-63. 3732. Mattoso, Kátia M. de Queirós. Etre esclave au Brésil: XVIe-XIXe.. Paris: Hachette, 1979. Translated as Ser escravo no Brasil (São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1982). Also translated as To be a Slave in Brazil, 1550-1888 (trans. Arthur Goldhammer) (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1986). (With new foreword by Stuart B. Schwartz.) 3733. Mattoso, Kátia de Queirós. “O filho da escrava (em torno da lei do ventre livre),” Revista brasileira de história, 8, no. 16 (1988), pp. 37-55. 3734. Mattoso, Kátia M. de Queirós. “No Brasil escravista: relações sociais entre libertos e homens livres e entre libertos e escravos,” Revista brasileira de história, 1, 2 (1981), pp. 219-33. 3735. Medeiros, Maria Alice de Aguiar. O elogio da dominação: relendo Casa Grande e Senzala. Rio de Janeiro: Achiamé, 1984. 3736. Mello, Pedro Carvalho de. “The Economics of Labor in Brazilian Coffee Plantations, 1850-1888” (PhD diss., University of Chicago, 1977). 3737. Mello, Pedro Carvalho de. “Estimativa da longevidade de escravos no Brasil na segunda metade do século XIX,” Estudos econômicos, 13, 1 (1983), pp. 151-80. 3738. *Mello, Pedro Carvalho de. “Expectation of Abolition and Sanguinity of Coffee Planters in Brazil, 1871-1888,” in Fogel and Engerman, eds., Markets and Production: Technical Papers, vol. 1 (Without Consent or Contract), pp. 629-46. 3739. Mello, Pedro Carvalho de, and Robert W. Slenes. “Análise econômica da escravidão no Brasil,” in Paulo Neuhaus, coord., Economia brasileira: uma visão histórica (Rio de Janeiro: Campus, 1980), pp. 89-122. 265 3740. *Mello, Zélia M. Cardoso, and Flávio A. M. de Saes. “Trabalho escravo e trabalho livre,” Anais do Encontro nacional de economia (12th, São Paulo, 1984), vol. 1, pp. 43360. 3741. Mendes, Claudinei Magno Magre. “Considerações em torno da análise da escravidão colonial,” História (São Paulo), 1 (1982), pp. 43-48. 3742. Mendes, Claudinei Magno Magre. “No mundo do Quingignoo,” Anais de história (Assis), 8 (1976), pp. 93-108. 3743. Mendes, M. Maia. “Escravatura no Brasil (1500-1700),” Congresso do Mundo Português (Lisbon, 1940), tomo 2, 2a secção, 1a parte, vol. 10, pp. 31-55. 3744. Menezes, Djacir. “A escravidão no Brasil, de Perdigão Malheiros (a nota de um brasilianista),” Revista de ciência política (Rio de Janeiro), 26, 3 (1983), pp. 61-66. 3745. Menezes, Lená M. de. “Efeitos da escravidão na adoção do trabalho livre no Brasil imperial,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VI reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1987), pp. 111-13. 3746. “Mesa redonda: Escravidão e abolição,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da V reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1986), pp. 63-70. Includes Eduardo Silva, “Dos arquivos da escravidão,” pp. 63-64; Márcia Elisa de Campos Graf, “A escravidão nos arquivos notariais,” pp. 65-66; and Walter F. Piazza, “O escravo em Santa Catarina,” pp. 67-70. 3747. Mira, João Manoel Lima. A evangelização do negro no periodo colonial brasileiro. São Paulo: Edições Loyola, 1983. 3748. Montenegro, Antônio Torres. “O encaminhamento político do fim da escravidão” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, 1983). 3749. Moraes, Evaristo de. A escravidão africana no Brasil (das origens à extincção). São Paulo: Companhia Editora Nacional, 1933. 2nd ed., revised by Alberto de los Santos. Asa Norte: Editora Universidade de Brasilia, 1986. 3750. Mott, Luiz R. B. “A escravatura: o propósito de uma representação a El-Rei sobre a escravatura no Brasil,” Revista do Instituto de estudos brasileiros, 14 (1973), pp. 127-36. 3751. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Escravidão e homossexualidade,” in Ronaldo Vainfas, ed., História da sexualidade no Brasil (Rio de Janeiro: Graal, 1986), pp. 19-40. 3752. Mott, Luiz R. B. Escravidão, homossexualidade e demonologia. São Paulo: Ícone, 1986. 3753. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Relações raciais entre homossexuais no Brasil colônia,” Revista brasileira de história, 5 (no. 10) (1985), pp. 99-122. 3754. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Revendo a história da escravidão no Brasil,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 11, 7 (no. 127) (1980), pp. 21-25. 3755. Mott, Luiz R. B. “O sexo cativo: alternativas eróticas dos africanos e seus descendentes no Brasil escravista” (Unpublished paper, Congresso Internacional sobre a Escravidão, São Paulo, 7-11 June 1988). 266 3756. Mott, Maria Lúcia de Barros. “A criança escrava na literatura de viagens,” Cadernos de pesquisa (Fundação Carlos Chagas), 31 (1979), pp. 57-68. 3757. Mott, Maria Lúcia de Barros. Submissão e resistência: a mulher na luta contra de escravidão. São Paulo: Contexto, 1988. 3758. Motta, José Flávio [de Mattos]. “Família escrava: uma incursão pela historiografia,” História: questões e debates (Associação paranaense de história - APAH), 9, no. 16 (1988), pp. 104-59. 3759. Motta, Roberto. “Palmares e o comunitarismo negro no Brasil,” Ciência e trópico (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco), 8, 2 (1980), pp. 215-29. 3760. Moura, Clovis. Brasil: raizes do protesto negro. São Paulo: Global, 1983. 3761. Moura, Clovis. “Da insurgência negra ao escravismo tardio,” Estudos econômicos, 17 (no. especial) (1987), pp. 37-59. 3762. Moura, Clovis. “Escravismo, colonialismo, imperialismo e racismo,” Afro-Ásia, 14 (1983), pp. 124-37. 3763. Moura, Clovis. História do negro brasileiro. São Paulo: Ática, 1989. 3764. Moura, Clovis. “Influência da escravidão negra na estrutura e comportamento da sociedade brasileira,” Estudos afro-asiáticos, 6-7 (1982), pp. 249-58. 3765. Moura, Clovis. As injustiças de Clio: o negro na historiografia brasileira. Rio de Janeiro: Oficina do Livro, 1991. 3766. Moura, Clovis. O negro, de bom escravo a mau cidadão. Rio de Janeiro: Conquista, 1977. 3767. Moura, Clovis. Os quilombos e a rebelião negra. São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1981. 3768. Moura, Clovis. Quilombos: resistência ao escravismo. São Paulo: Editora Atica, 1987. 3769. Moura, Clovis. Rebeliões da senzala: Quilombos, insurreições, guerrilhas. São Paulo: Edições Zumbí, 1959. 3770. Mouro, Fernando Augusto Albuquerque. “A contribuição de Gilberto Freyre em Casa Grande e Senzala para o estudo da sociedade brasileira: o papel da cultura africana,” Revista de historia (São Paulo), 53 (no. 105) (1976), pp. 121-46. 3771. Mulvey, Patricia Ann. “Black Brothers and Sisters: Membership in the Black Lay Brotherhoods of Colonial Brazil,” Luso-Brazilian Review, 19, 2 (1980), pp. 253-79. 3772. Mulvey, Patricia Ann. “The Black Lay Brotherhoods of Colonial Brazil: A History” (PhD diss., City University of New York, 1976). 3773. *Mulvey, Patricia Ann. “Female Slavery in Brazil: Black Brasileiras in the 18th and 19th Centuries: Present State of Research” (Paper presented to the Conference of the Association of Black Women Historians on “Women in the African Diaspora: An Interdisciplinary Perspective,” Howard University, 14 June 1983). 3774. Mulvey, Patricia Ann. “Slave Confraternities in Brazil: Their Role in Colonial Society,” Americas, 39, 1 (1982), pp. 39-68. 267 3775. Nabuco, Carolina. “O elemento servil - a abolição,” Anais do 3 Congresso de História Nacional (Rio de Janeiro, 1938) (Rio de Janeiro: Instituto histórico e geográfico brasileiro, 1941), vol. 3, pp. 239-56. 3776. Nabuco, Joaquim. “A escravidão,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico brasileiro, 204 (1949), pp. 5-106. 3777. Nascimento, Abdias do. O Quilombismo: documentos de uma militância pan-africanista. Petrópolis: Vozes, 1980. 3778. Nascimento, Abdias do, ed. O negro revoltado (trabalhos apresentados ao I Congresso do Negro Brasileiro) (Rio de Janeiro, 1950). Rio de Janeiro: Ed. GRD, 1968. For contents see Carneiro, Nascimento, Nogueira, Oliveira, Pereira, and Ramos. 3779. Nelson, Margaret V. “The Negro in Brazil as Seen through the Chronicles of Travelers, 1800-1868,” Journal of Negro History, 30, 2 (1945), pp. 203-18. 3780. Nequete, Lenine. O escravo na jurisprudência brasileira: magistratura & ideologia no 2o Reinado. Porto Alegre: Tribunal de Justiça do Rio Grande do Sul, 1988. 3781. Nequete, Lenine. “As relações entre senhor e escravo no século XIX: o caso da escrava Honorata,” Revista brasileira de estudos políticos, no. 53 (1981), pp. 223-48. 3782. Nina Rodrigues, Raymundo. Os africanos no Brasil. 3rd edition. São Paulo: Companhia Editora Nacional, 1945. 3783. “No centenário da abolição,” special section in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989). For contents see Bacelar, Balhana, Colaço, Costa, Cunha, Goldschmidt, Gonçalves, Graf, Hutter, Karasch, Kuznesof, Moreira, Neves, Piccolo (2), Ricci, A. dos Santos, C. dos Santos, M. dos Santos, Silva, (Nizza da) Silva, Tavares, Vainfas, Wernet, and Westphalen (2). 3784. Novais, Fernando. “Escravidão: uma façanha do capital mercantil,” Cadernos de debate: história do Brasil, no. 1 (1976), pp. 74-75. 3785. Novinsky, Anita. “Impedimento ao trabalho livre no período inquisitorial e as respostas da realidade brasileira,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 231-54. 3786. Odalia, Nilo. A abolição da escravatura. São Paulo: Museu Paulista, 1964. 3787. Odalia, Nilo. “A abolição da escravatura,” Anais do Museu Paulista, 18 (1964), pp. 121-45. 3788. Oliveira, Arcebispo Dom Oscar de. “O que fez a Igreja no Brasil pelo escravo africano,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico brasileiro, 326 (1980), pp. 311-26. 3789. Oliveira de Abreu, Carlos Lourival. “Quilombolas, munição e dinheiro,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 11, 6 (no. 126) (1980), pp. 5-6. 3790. Oliveira Júnior, Lourival Batista de. “Onda negra, medo branco (review essay: Azevedo, Onda negra, medo branco),” Estudos econômicos, 18 (no. especial) (1988), pp. 181-84. 268 3791. *Palha, Américo. Os precursores da abolição. Rio de Janeiro: Distribuidore Record, 1965. 3792. Pang, Eul-Soo. “Modernization and Slavocracy in Nineteenth Century Brazil,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 9, 4 (1979), pp. 667-88. 3793. Pang, Eul-Soo. “Tecnologia e escravocracia no Brasil durante o século XIX: legislação e evidências,” Anais do Museu Paulista, 30 (1980-81), pp. 55-135. 3794. Paredes, Carlos Sixirei. “Violencia blanca, rebeldía negra y abolicionismo en el Brasil del siglo XIX,” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 607-23. 3795. Pedreira, Pedro Tomás. Os quilombos brasileiros. Salvador: Prefeitura Municipal do Salvador, Departmento de Cultura da SMEC, 1973. 3796. Perdigão Malheiros, Agostinho Marques. A escravidão no Brasil: ensaio históricojurídico-social. 2 vols. Rio de Janeiro, 1866-67. Reprinted São Paulo: Edições Cultura, 1944. 3797. Peregalli, Enrique. Escravidão no Brasil. São Paulo: Global, 1988. 3798. Pescatello, Ann M. “Prêto Power, Brazilian Style: Modes of Reactions to Slavery in the Nineteenth Century,” in Pescatello, ed., Old Roots in New Lands, pp. 77-106. 3799. Pinheiro, Paulo Sérgio, coord. Trabalho escravo, economia, e sociedade: Conferência sobre história e ciências sociais, UNICAMP. Rio de Janeiro: Paz e Terra, 1983. For contents see Bell (commentaries by Eisenberg, Hasenbalg, and Novais), Castro (commentaries by Mello, Novais, Oliveira and Oliveira, and Resende), and Franco (commentaries by Alvim Junior, Lopes, Silvert, Toledo, and Vogt). 3800. Pinsky, Jaime. A escravidão no Brasil. 3rd ed. São Paulo: Global, 1981. 7th ed. São Paulo: Contexto, 1988. 3801. *Pio, Fernando. “Senhores de engenho e negros cativos,” Revista do Museu do Açúcar, 3 (1968), pp. 41-53. Reprinted in Leonardo Dantas Silva, ed., Estudos sobre a escravidão negra: 1 (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Editora Massangana, 1988), pp. 453-69. 3802. Piva, Frei Elói de, OFM. “Em torno da abolição da escravatura,” Revista eclesiastica brasileira, 48, 3 (no. 191) (1988), pp. 689-705. 3803. Porter, Dorothy B. “The Negro in the Brazilian Abolition Movement,” Journal of Negro History, 37, 1 (1952), pp. 54-80. 3804. “O protesto escravo I,” special number of Estudos econômicos, 17 (no. especial) (1987). 3805. “O protesto escravo II,” special number of Estudos econômicos, 18 (no. especial) (1988). 3806. Queiroz Júnior, Teófilo de. “Abolicionismo, um processo em questão,” Revista do Instituto de estudos brasileiros, 28 (1988), pp. 101-10. 3807. Queiroz, Suely Robles Reis de. A abolição da escravidão. São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1981. 269 3808. Queiroz, Suely Robles Reis de. “Aspectos ideológicos da escravidão,” Estudos econômicos, 13, 1 (1983), pp. 85-102. 3809. Queiroz, Suely Robles Reis de. “Brandura da escravidão brasileira: mito ou realidade?” Revista de história, 52 (no. 103, tomo II) (1975), pp. 443-82. 3810. Queiroz, Suely Robles Reis de. “El orígen de los negros brasileños,” Revista de la Universidad de México, 25, 2 (1970), pp. 18-24. 3811. Queiroz, Suely Robles Reis de. Escravidão negra no Brasil. São Paulo: Editora Atica, 1987. 3812. Queiroz, Suely Robles Reis de. “Lembranças do passado cativo,” Ciência hoje, 8 (no. 48, suplemento) (1988), pp. 36-39. 3813. Queiroz, Suely Robles Reis de. “Rebeldia escrava e historiografia,” Estudos econômicos, 17 (no. especial) (1987), pp. 7-35. 3814. Querino, Manuel Raymundo. A raça africana e os seus costumes. Salvador, Bahia: Livraria Progresso Editora, 1955. 3815. Ramos, Artur. A aculturação negra no Brasil. São Paulo: Editora Nacional, 1942. 3816. Ramos, Artur. “O auto dos quilombos,” Revista do Instituto arqueológico, histórico e geográphico pernambucano, 37 (1941-42), pp. 202-07. 3817. Ramos, Artur. “Castigos de escravos,” Revista do Arquivo municipal (São Paulo), 47 (1938), pp. 79-103. 3818. Ramos, Artur. O negro na civilização brasileira. Rio de Janeiro: Livraria Editôra da Casa do Estudante do Brasil, 1971. Translated as The Negro in Brazil (trans. Richard Pattee) (New York: Associated Publishers, 1939). 3819. *Ramos, Donald. “The Black Family in Brazil, 1760-1840” (Unpublished, 1978). 3820. Ramos, Duvitiliano. “A posse útil da terra entre os quilombolas,” in Abdias do Nascimento, org., O negro revoltado (Congresso do negro brasileiro, Rio de Janeiro, 1950) (Rio de Janeiro: Edições GRD, 1968), pp. 91-98. 3821. Ramos, Luis A. de Oliveira. “Pombal e o esclavagismo,” Revista da Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto (Série de história), 2 (1971), pp. 169-78. 3822. Rangel, Ignácio. “Dualidade e ‘escravismo colonial’ (review essay: Gorender, Escravismo colonial),” Encontros com a civilização brasileira (Rio de Janeiro), 3 (1978), pp. 79-92. 3823. *Rayol, Domingos Antônio. O negro na emprêsa colonial dos portuguêses na Amazônia. Lisbon: Papelaria Fernandes, 1961. 3824. *Reichert, Rolf. “El ocaso del Islam entre los negros brasileños” (Proceedings of the 36th International Congress of Americanists?), vol. 3, pp. 621-25. 3825. Reis, Arthur Cezar Ferreira. “O negro na Amazônia,” Boletim geográfico (Rio de Janeiro), 17 (no. 149) (1959), pp. 125-26. 3826. Reis, Eustáquio J., and Elisa P. Reis. “As elites agrárias e a abolição da escravidão no Brasil,” Dados (Revista de ciências sociais), 31, 3 (1988), pp. 309-41. 270 3827. Reis, Jaime. “Brazil: The Peculiar Abolition (review essay: Conrad, Destruction of Brazilian Slavery, and Toplin, Abolition of Slavery in Brazil),” Ibero-Amerikanisches Archiv, 3, 3 (1977), pp. 281-94. 3828. Reis, João José. “Introdução,” in idem, ed., Escravidão e invenção da liberdade, pp. 916. 3829. Reis, João José, and Eduardo Silva. Negociação e conflito: a resistência negra no Brasil escravista. São Paulo: Editora Schwarcz, 1989. 3830. Reis, João José, ed. Escravidão e invenção da liberdade: estudos sobre o negro no Brasil. São Paulo: Editora Brasiliense, 1988. For contents see Bellini, Gudeman and Schwartz, Mattoso, Klein and Engerman, Mott, Reis (2), and Silva. 3831. Renault, Delso. “Atos cruéis e humanos - extremos da escravidão brasileira,” Revista brasileira de cultura, 6 (no. 20) (1974), pp. 71-80. 3832. Ribeiro, João. O elemento negro: história, folclore, linguística. Rio de Janeiro: Record, 193?. 3833. Ribeiro, René. “Relations of the Negro with Christianity in Portuguese America: The Negro and the New Social Slavery Structure,” Americas, 14, 4 (1958), pp. 454-84. 3834. Ribeiro, Sílvia Lara. “Do mouro cativo ao escravo negro: continuidade ou ruptura?” Anais do Museu Paulista, 30 (1980-81), pp. 375-400. 3835. Rios, José Artur. “A fazenda de café: da escravidão ao trabalho livre,” in Ensaios sobre café e desenvolvimento econômico (Rio de Janeiro: Instituto brasileiro do café, 1973), pp. 327. Translated as “Coffee and Agricultural Labor (trans. Magnolia Maciel Peláez),” in Carlos Manoel Peláez, ed., Essays on Coffee and Economic Development (Rio de Janeiro: Instituto brasileiro do café, 1973), pp. 3-26. 3836. Rodrigues, José Honório. Brasil e Africa: outro horizonte. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Civilização, 1961. 2nd revised edition, 1964. Translated as Brazil and Africa (trans. Richard A. Mazzara and Sam Hileman) (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1965). 3837. Rodrigues, José Honório. “A rebeldia negra e a abolição,” in História e historiografia (Petrópolis: Vozes, 1970), pp. 65-88. 3838. Rosa, Zita de Paula. “Laços e perdas em família,” Ciência hoje, 8 (no. 48, suplemento) (1988), pp. 46ff. 3839. Rosário, Adalgisa Maria Vieira do. “Relação de documentos do Arquivo Histórico da Câmara Federal relativos à escravatura no Brasil,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 2, pp. 309-23. 3840. Rout, Leslie B. “The African in Colonial Brazil,” in Kilson and Rotberg, eds., African Diaspora, pp. 132-72. 271 3841. Rout, Leslie B. “Race and Slavery in Brazil,” Wilson Quarterly, 1, 1 (1976), pp. 7389. 3842. Russell-Wood, A. J. R. “Black and Mulatto Brotherhoods in Colonial Brazil: A Study in Collective Behavior,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 54, 4 (1974), pp. 567-602. Revised as “Collective Behaviour: The Brotherhoods,” in idem, Black Man in Slavery and Freedom, pp. 128-60. 3843. Russell-Wood, A. J. R. The Black Man in Slavery and Freedom in Colonial Brazil. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1982. 3844. Russell-Wood, A. J. R. “Colonial Brazil,” in Cohen and Greene, eds., Neither Slave nor Free, pp. 84-133. Pp. 98-108 revised as “Free Blacks and Free Mulattoes in the Economy of Portuguese America,” in idem, Black Man in Slavery and Freedom, pp. 50-66. Pp. 109-17 revised as “Free Blacks and Free Mulattos in the Society of Portuguese America,” in idem, Black Man in Slavery and Freedom, pp. 67-82. 3845. Russell-Wood, A. J[ohn] R. “Examination of Selected Statutes of Three African Brotherhoods,” in Albert Meyers and Diane Elizabeth Hopkins, eds., Manipulating the Saints: Religious Sodalities and Social Integration in Postconquest Latin America (Hamburg: WAYASBAHVerlag, 1988), pp. 243-50. 3846. Russell-Wood, A. J. R. “Iberian Expansion and the Issue of Black Slavery: Changing Portuguese Attitudes, 1440-1770,” American Historical Review, 83, 1 (1978), pp. 1642. 3847. Saes, Flávio A. M. de. “O término do escravismo: uma nota sobre a historiografia,” Estudos econômicos, 12, 3 (1982), pp. 29-40. 3848. Salles, Vicente. “A cabanagem, os escravos, os engenhos,” Brasil açucareiro, 36, 5 (1968), pp. 33-38. 3849. Salles, Vicente. “O negro na luta de classes,” Leitura (Rio de Janeiro), 25 (no. 109) (1967), pp. 36-38. 3850. Samara, Eni de Mesquita. “Documentação: Os testamentos de libertos como fonte para a história da escravidão,” Revista brasileira de história, 8, no. 16 (1988), pp. 266-68. 3851. Sampaio Garcia, Rozendo. “Escravatura: Brasil (escravos negros),” in Joel Serrão, ed., Dicionário de história de Portugal (Lisbon: Iniciativas Editoriais, 1975), vol. 2, pp. 81-84. 3852. Sant’Ana, Rizio Bruno de, and Iraci del Nero da Costa. A escravidão brasileira nos artigos de revistas (1976-1985). São Paulo: Fundação Instituto de Pesquisas Econômicas, 1988. Reprinted in Estudos econômicos, 19, 1 (1989), pp. 131-94. 3853. Santos, Juana E. dos. “O negro e a abolição,” Vozes (Revista católica de cultura) (Petrópolis), 73, 3 (1979), pp. 5-12. 3854. Santos, Luiz A. de Castro. “A casa-grande e o sobrado na obra de Gilberto Freyre,” Anuário antropológico/83 (Rio de Janeiro: Fortaleza, 1985), pp. 73-102. 272 3855. *Santos, Paulo Roberto dos. “A brecha camponesa no sistema escravista: uma revisão historiográfica” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 3856. Saraiva, Antônio José. “Le père Antonio Vieira, S.J., et la question de l’esclavage des noirs au XVIIe siècle,” Annales: économies, sociétés, civilisations, 22, 6 (1967), pp. 1289-1309. 3857. Saunders, J. V. D. “The Brazilian Negro,” Americas, 15, 3 (1959), pp. 271-90. 3858. *Schumann, Beate. “Wederstand de Sklaven im Kolonialen Brasilien” (Diss., University of Hamburg, 1987). 3859. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Brazilian Slavery: Recent Trends in Historiography,” Indian Historical Review, 15, 1-2 (1988-89), pp. 16-32. 3860. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Colonial Brazil: The Role of the State in a Slave Social Formation,” in Karen Spalding, ed., Essays in the Political, Economic and Social History of Colonial Latin America (Newark, Del.: University of Delaware Latin American Studies Program, 1982), pp. 1-23. (Occasional Papers and Monographs, no. 3) 3861. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Mocambos, quilombos e Palmares: a resistência escrava no Brasil colonial,” Estudos econômicos, 17 (no. especial) (1987), pp. 61-88. 3862. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Patterns of Slaveholding in the Americas: New Evidence from Brazil,” American Historical Review, 87, 1 (1982), pp. 55-86. Translated as “Padrões de propriedade de escravos nas Américas: nova evidência para o Brasil,” Estudos econômicos, 13, 1 (1983), pp. 259-96. Also translated as “Patrones de la propriedad de esclavos en América: nueva evidencia de Brasil,” Historia y sociedad (Rio Piedras), 1 (1988), pp. 59-80. 3863. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Resistance and Accommodation in Eighteenth-Century Brazil: The Slaves’ View of Slavery,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 57, 1 (1977), pp. 6981. 3864. Schwartz, Stuart B. “The Plantations of St. Benedict: the Benedictine Sugar Mills of Colonial Brazil,” Americas, 39, 1 (1982), pp. 1-22. 3865. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Recent Trends in the Study of Slavery in Brazil,” LusoBrazilian Review, 25, 1 (1988), pp. 1-25. 3866. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Segredos internos: trabalho escravo e vida escrava no Brasil,” História: questões e debates (Associação paranaense de história - APAH), 4, 6 (1983), pp. 45-60. 3867. Schwartz, Stuart B. Slaves, Peasants, and Rebels: Reconsidering Brazilian Slavery. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1992. 3868. Sciscino, Alaôr Eduardo. Escravidão e a saga de Manoel Congo. Rio de Janeiro: Achiamé, 1988. 3869. Scott, Rebecca J. The Abolition of Slavery and the Aftermath of Abolition in Brazil. Durham: Duke University Press, 1988. 273 3870. Silva, Eduardo. “Abolição e república,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1988), pp. 61-63. 3871. Silva, Eduardo. Barões e escravidão: três gerações de fazendeiros e a crise da estrutura escravista. Rio de Janeiro: Nova Fronteira, 1984. 3872. Silva, Eduardo. “Fugas, revoltas e quilombos: os limites da negociação,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1988), pp. 123-29. 3873. Silva, Eduardo [da]. “A função ideológica da ‘brecha camponesa’,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da IV reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1985), pp. 191-95. 3874. Silva, Eduardo. “Por uma nova perspectiva das relações escravistas,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da V reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1986), pp. 141-47. 3875. Silva, Francisco Carlos Teixeira da. “Produção de alimentos e trabalho escravo no Brasil colonial,” História: questões e debates (Associação paranaense de história - APAH), 9, no. 16 (1988), pp. 66-82. 3876. Silva, Ledenice Damásio da. “Os processos de inserção e rejeição sócioeconômica do negro: uma contribuição para a história de Cantagalo” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade de Brasília, 1980). 3877. Silva, Leonardo Dantas. “A instituição do Rei do Congo e sua presença nos maracatus,” in idem, ed., Estudos sobre a escravidão negra: 2 (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Editora Massangana, 1988), pp. 13-53 (and “album fotográfico” following). 3878. Silva, Leonardo Dantas, ed. Alguns documentos para a histôria da escravidão. Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco/Editora Massangana, 1988. 3879. Silva, Leonardo Dantas, ed. A escravidão: Joaquim Nabuco. Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Editora Massangana, 1988. Pref. Manuel Correia de Andrade. 3880. Silva, Leonardo Dantas, ed. Estudos sobre a escravidão negra. 2 vols. Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco/Editora Massangana, 1988. 3881. Silva, Marcos Rodrigues da. O Negro no Brasil: história e desafios. São Paulo: FTD, 1987. 3882. Silva, M. Beatriz Nizza da. “Escravidão e casamento no Brasil colonial,” in Estudos de história de Portugal: homenagem a A. H. de Oliveira Marques (Lisbon: Editorial Estampa, 1983), vol. 2, pp. 227-39. 3883. Silva, M. Beatriz Nizza da. “A família escrava no Brasil colonial,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 21-26. 3884. Silva, Marilene Rosa Nogueira da. Negro na rua: a nova face da escravidão. São Paulo: HUCITEC, 1988. 274 3885. Silva, Marinete dos Santos. “Escravidão e prostituição: das várias utilidades de uma escrava negra,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1988), pp. 119-22. Reprinted in Revista brasileira de economia, 42, 2 (1988), pp. 123-28. 3886. Silva, M. Manuela. “A Gazeta Luzitana e o movimento abolicionista (1883-1889),” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 133-38. 3887. Silva, Theodoro Machado Freire Pereira da. “Reforma do estado servil (discursos proferidos na Câmara dos Deputados e no Senado).” Reprinted in Leonardo Dantas Silva, ed., Estudos sobre a escravidão negra: 2 (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Editora Massangana, 1988), pp. 201-314. 3888. Silvestre, Inalda. “Bibliografia: o negro no Brasil,” Ciência e trópico (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco), 7, 1 (1979), pp. 165-76. 3889. Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história, 6th. (Goiâna, 1971). Anais (3 vols.). São Paulo, 1973. “Trabalho livre e trabalho escravo”. 3890. Siqueira, Sônia Aparecida. “A escravidão negra no pensamento do bispo Azeredo Coutinho: contribuição ao estudo da mentalidade do último inquisidor geral,” in Actas V Colóquio internacional de estudos luso-brasileiros (Coimbra, 1963) (Coimbra: n.p., 1966), vol. 3, pp. 147-212. *Also in Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico de São Paulo, 14 (no. 56) (1963), pp. 34966; 15 (no. 57) (1964), pp. 141-97. Reprinted in Leonardo Dantas Silva, ed., Estudos sobre a escravidão negra: 1 (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Editora Massangana, 1988), pp. 365-452. 3891. Siqueira, Sônia Aparecida. “Trabalho compulsório: a pena inquisitorial das galés,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 353-72. 3892. Skidmore, Thomas E. “The Death of Brazilian Slavery, 1866-88,” in Frederick B. Pike, ed., Latin American History: Select Problems (New York: Harcourt, Brace, and World, 1969), pp. 133-71. 3893. Slenes, Robert W. “The Demography and Economics of Brazilian Slavery: 18501888” (PhD diss., Stanford University, 1976). 3894. Slenes, Robert W. “Escravos, cartórios e desburocratização: o que Rui Barbosa no queimou será destruído agora?” Revista brasileira de história, 5 (no. 10) (1985), pp. 166-96. 3895. Slenes, Robert W. “Lares negros, olhares brancos: histórias da família escrava no século XIX,” Revista brasileira de história, 8, no. 16 (1988), pp. 189-203. 3896. Slenes, Robert W. “O que Rui Barbosa no queimou: novas fontes para o estudo da escravidão no século XIX,” Estudos econômicos, 13, 1 (1983), pp. 117-50. 3897. Slenes, Robert W. “As taxas de fecundidade da população escrava brasileira na década de 1870: estimativas e implicações,” Anais do V Encontro nacional de estudos 275 populacionais (São Paulo, 1984) (São Paulo: Associação Brasileira de Estudos Populacionais, 1986), pp. 53-71. 3898. Soares, Julião Randel de Macedo. 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Kessler, Arnold. “Bahian Manumission Practices in the Early Nineteenth Century” (Unpublished paper presented to Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, San Francisco, 1973). 283 4021. *Knox, Miridan Britto. “Demografia escrava no Piauí,” in Associação Brasileira de Estudos Populacionais (ABEP), ed., História da população: estudos sobre a América Latina (São Paulo: Fundação Sistema Estadual de Análise de Dados, 1990), pp. 244-50. 4022. Knox, Miridan Britto. “A questão servil na fala dos presidentes da Província do Piauí,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 2, pp. 335-70. 4023. Kuznesof, Elizabeth. (review essay: Schwartz, Sugar Plantations in the Formation of Brazilian Society), Luso-Brazilian Review, 25, 1 (1988), pp. 147-52. 4024. “Leilão de escravos ingênuos em Valença,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 11, 1 (no. 121) (1980), pp. 13-15. 4025. *Leite, Glacyra Lazzari. “Estrutura e comportamentos sociais: Pernambuco em 1817” (Tese doutorado, Universidade de São Paulo, 1976). 4026. Lima Júnior, Félix. A escravidão em Alagoas. Maceió: Imp. Universitária, 1974. 4027. Lopes, Nei. “Malês: o islo negro no Brasil,” Afrodiáspora (Rio de Janeiro), 3, 6-7 (1985), pp. 107-14. 4028. Macedo, Sérgio D. Teixeira de. Palmares: a tróia negra. Rio de Janeiro: Distribuidora Record, 1963. 4029. Marcílio, Maria Luiza. “The Price of Slaves in XIXth Century Brazil: A Quantitative Analysis of the Registration of Slave Sales in Bahia,” in Studi in memoria di Federigo Melis (Napoli: Giannini Editore, 1978), vol. 5, pp. 83-97. 4030. Mattoso, Kátia M. de Queirós. “A propósito de cartas de alforria - Bahia 17791850” Anais de história, 4 (1972), pp. 23-52. 4031. Mattoso, Kátia M. de Queirós. “Os escravos na Bahia no alvorecer do século XIX (estudo de um grupo social),” Revista de historia, 48 (no. 97) (1974), pp. 109-35. Translated as “Les esclaves de Bahia au début du XIXe siècle (étude d’un groupe social),” Cahiers des Amériques Latines, 9-10 (1974), pp. 105-29. 4032. Mattoso, Kátia M. de Queirós. “Slave, Free, and Freed Family Structures in Nineteenth-Century Salvador, Bahia,” Luso-Brazilian Review, 52, 1 (1988), pp. 69-84. 4033. Mattoso, Kátia M. de Queirós. Testaments d’esclaves libérés à Bahia au XIXe siècle: Une source pour l’étude de mentalités d’un groupe social. Forthcoming. 4034. Mattoso, Kátia M. de Queirós, Herbert S. Klein, and Stanley L. Engerman. “Research Note: Trends and Patterns in the Prices of Manumitted Slaves: Bahia, 18191888,” Slavery and Abolition, 7, 1 (1986), pp. 59-67. Translated as “Notas sobra as tendências e padrões dos preços de alforria na Bahia, 1819-1888,” in Reis, ed., Escravidão e invenção da liberdade, pp. 60-72. 4035. *Mello, José António Gonsalves de. “Um governador colonial e as seitas africanas,” Revista do Instituto arqueológico, histórico e geográfico pernambucano, 42 (1952), pp. 4145. 284 Reprinted in Leonardo Dantas Silva, ed., Estudos sobre a escravidão negra: 1 (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Editora Massangana, 1988), pp. 357-63. 4036. Mello, Mário. “A Republica dos Palmares,” in Estudos afro-brasileiros (1o Congresso Afro-Brasileiro, Recife, 1934) (Rio de Janeiro, 1935), pp. 181-86. Also in Revista do Instituto arqueológico, histórico e geográfico pernambucano, 32 (1932), pp. 189-92. 4037. Mello Neto, J. A. Gonçalves de. “A situação do negro sob o domínio hollandez,” in Freyre, et al., Novos estudos afro-brasileiros, pp. 201-21. 4038. Metcalf, Alida C[hristine]. “Families of Planters, Peasants, and Slaves: Strategies for Survival in Santana de Parnaiba, Brazil, 1720-1820” (PhD diss., University of Texas, Austin, 1983). 4039. Monteiro, Hamilton de Mattos. “O tratamento de escravos em Pernambuco 1856,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 8, 3 (1977), pp. 6-8. 4040. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Brancos, pardos, pretos e índios em Sergipe: 1825-1830,” Anais de história, 6 (1974), pp. 139-84. 4041. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Estatísticas e estimativas da população livre e escrava de Sergipe del Rei de 1707 a 1888,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 7, 12 (1976), pp. 19-23. 4042. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Os escravos nos anúncios de jornal de Sergipe,” Anais do V Encontro nacional de estudos populacionais (São Paulo, 1986) (São Paulo: Associação Brasileira de Estudos Populacionais, 1986), pp. 3-18. 4043. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Pardos e pretos em Sergipe, 1774-1851,” Revista do Instituto de estudos brasileiros, 18 (1976), pp. 7-37. 4044. *Mott, Luiz R. B. “População e economia: aspectos do problema da mão-de-obra escrava em Sergipe (séculos 18 e 19),” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico de Sergipe (Aracajú), 28 (1982), pp. ( ). Also as “População e economia: o problema da mão-de-obra escrava em Sergipe,” in Sergipe del Rey: população, economia e sociedade (Aracajú: FUNDESC, 1986), pp. 139-50. 4045. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Rebeliões escravas em Sergipe,” Estudos econômicos, 17 (no. especial) (1987), pp. 111-30. 4046. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Terror na Casa da Torre: tortura de escravos na Bahia colonial,” in Reis, ed., Escravidão e invenção da liberdade, pp. 17-32. 4047. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Uma escrava no Piauí escreve uma carta ... ,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 10, 5 (1979), pp. 7-10. 4048. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Violência e repressão em Sergipe: notícia sobre revoltas de escravos (séc. XIX),” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 11, 5 (no. 125) (1980), pp. 3-21. Also in Sergipe del Rey: população, economia e sociedade (Aracaju: FUNDESC, 1986), pp. 189-204. 285 4049. *Mott, Luiz R. B., ed. Estudos sobre a história e a actualidade do negro na Bahia. São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1988. 4050. *Moura, Clovis. “A grande insurreição dos escravos baianos,” Revista brasileira (Revista do Brasil?), 16 (1958), pp. 166-78. 4051. Nascimento, Abdias do. “O quilombismo: uma alternativa política afrobrasileira,” Afrodiáspora (Rio de Janeiro), 3, 6-7 (1985), pp. 19-39. 4052. Nascimento, Beatriz. “O quilombo do Jabaquara,” Vozes (Revista católica de cultura) (Petrópolis), 73, 3 (1979), pp. 16-18. 4053. Nina Rodrigues, Raymundo. “A Troya negra: erros e lacunas da história de Palmares,” Revista do Instituto archeológico, histórico e geográphico pernambucano, 11 (nos. 61-64) (1904), pp. 645-72. Reprinted as “A troia negra (erros e lacunas da história de Palmares),” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico brasileiro, 75, 1 (1912), pp. 231-58; also as “Sublevações de negros no Brasil anteriores ao século XIX - Palmares,” in idem, Os africanos no Brasil (Rio de Janeiro: Companhia Editora Nacional, 1945), pp. 125-66; also as “A Tróia negra: erros e lacunas da história de Palmares,” in Leonardo Dantas Silva, ed., Estudos sobre a escravidão negra: 1 (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Editora Massangana, 1988), pp. 13-37. 4054. Nzibo, Yusuf A. “Afro-brazilian Resistance against Slave Oppression,” Afrodiáspora (Rio de Janeiro), 2, 4 (1984), pp. 71-86. 4055. Oliveira, Franciso de, and Luiz-Felipe de Alencastro. “Engenho de sempre (review essay: Schwartz, Segredos internos),” Novos estudos CEBRAP, 24 (1989), pp. 193-202. 4056. Ott, Carlos B. “O negro bahiano,” in Les Afro-américains (Paris, 1953), pp. 141-51. (Mémoires de l’Institut Français de l’Afrique Noire, no. 27) 4057. Pedreira, Pedro Tomás. “Os quilombos dos Palmares e o Senado da Câmara da Cidade do Salvador,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 11, 3 (no. 123) (1980), pp. 14-17. 4058. Pedreira, Pedro Tomás. “Sobre o quilombo ‘Buraco do Tatu’,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 10, 7 (1979), pp. 7-10. 4059. *Petraukas, Maria Evilmardes Dantas. “As relações de trabalho dos escravos de ganho e de aluguel na cidade de Salvador (1800-1822)” (Tese de mestrado, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, 1987). 4060. Pierson, Donald. “The Negro in Bahia, Brazil,” American Sociological Review, 4, 4 (1939), pp. 524-33. 4061. Pierson, Donald. Negroes in Brazil: A Study of Race Contact at Bahia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1942. 4062. Pontes, Carlos. “Uma escrava original,” in Freyre, et al., Novos estudos afro-brasileiros, pp. 132-40. 4063. *Porto, Costa. “‘Escravos de Guiné’ em Pernambuco,” Revista do Museu açucareiro (Recife), 4, 6 (1972), pp. 35-41. 286 4064. Prince, Howard M. “Slave Rebellion in Bahia, 1807-35” (PhD diss., Columbia University, 1972). 4065. Reichert, Rolf. “Die Sklavenrevolte von 1835 im Lichte der arabischen Dokumente des Staatsarchivs Bahia (Brasilien),” Die Welt des Islams, 10, 3-4 (1966), pp. 16469. 4066. Reis, Jaime. “Abolition and the Economics of Slaveholding in North East Brazil” (Occasional Paper no 11, Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Glasgow, 1974). Also in Boletín de estudios latinoamericanos y del Caribe (Amsterdam), 17 (1974), pp. 3-20. 4067. Reis, Jaime. “From banguê to usina: Social Aspects of Growth and Modernization in the Sugar Industry of Pernambuco, Brazil, 1850-1920,” in Kenneth Duncan and Ian Rutledge, eds., Land and Labour in Latin America (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1977), pp. 369-96. 4068. Reis, Jaime. “The Impact of Abolitionism in Northeast Brazil: A Quantitative Approach,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 107-22. 4069. Reis, João José. “Documentação: Devassa contra um terreiro de calundu em Cachoeira, 1785,” Revista brasileira de história, 8, no. 16 (1988), pp. 233-50. 4070. Reis, João José. “O levante dos Malês na Bahia: uma interpretação política,” Estudos econômicos, 17 (no. especial) (1987), pp. 131-49. 4071. Reis, João José. “Magia jeje na Bahia: a invasão do calundu do Pasto de Cachoeira, 1785,” Revista brasileira de história, 8, no. 16 (1988), pp. 57-87. 4072. Reis, João José. “Nas malhas do poder escravista: a invasão do candomblé do Accú, 1829,” Religião e sociedade, 13, 3 (1986), pp. 108-27. 4073. *Reis, João José. “O ‘rol dos culpados’: notas sobre um documento da rebelião de 1835,” Anais do Arquivo público do estado da Bahia, 48 (1985), pp. ( ). 4074. *Reis, João José. “População e rebelião: notas sobre a população escrava na Bahia na primeira metade do século XIX,” Revista das ciências humanas, 1, 1 (1980), pp. 143-54. 4075. Reis, João José. Rebelião escrava no Brasil: a história do levante dos Malês, 1835. São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1986. 4076. Reis, João José. “Resistência escrava em Ilhéus: um documento inédito,” Anais do Arquivo do Estado da Bahia, no. 44 (1979), pp. 285-97. 4077. Reis, João José. “Resistência escrava na Bahia: ‘Poderemos brincar, folgar e cantar’: o protesto escravo nas Américas,” Afro-Ásia, no. 14 (1983), pp. 107-23. 4078. Reis, João José. “Slave Rebellion in Brazil: The African Muslim Uprising in Bahia, 1835” (PhD diss., University of Minnesota, 1983). 4079. Reis, João José. “Slave Resistance in Brazil: Bahia, 1807-1835,” Luso-Brazilian Review, 25, 1 (1988), pp. 111-44. 4080. Reis, João José. “Slave Revolt in Bahia 1790-1835: Economy, Society, Demography” (MA thesis, University of Minnesota, 1977). 287 4081. Reis, João José. “Um balanço dos estudos sobre as revoltas escravas da Bahia,” in idem, ed., Escravidão e invenção da liberdade, pp. 87-141. 4082. Reis, João José, and Paulo F. de Moraes Farias. “Islam and Slave Resistance in Bahia, Brazil,” Islam et sociétés au sud du Sahara, 3 (1988), pp. 41-66. 4083. Ribeiro, René. “O negro em Pernambuco,” Revista do Instituto arqueológico, histórico e geográfico pernambucano, 42 (1948-49), pp. 7-25. Reprinted in Leonardo Dantas Silva, ed., Estudos sobre a escravidão negra: 2 (Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Editora Massangana, 1988), pp. 57-78. 4084. Sant’Ana, Moacir Medeiros. “Quilombo dos Palmares: bibliografia” (Mimeo manuscript, Simpósio nacional sobre o Quilombo dos Palmares, Maceió, 1981). 4085. Santos, Ana Maria Barros dos. “Introdução ao estudo da escravidão em Pernambuco e sua transição para o trabalho livre” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, 1977). 4086. Santos, Ana Maria Barros dos. Die Sklaverei in Brasilien und ihre sozialen und wirtschaftlichen Folgen: Dargestellt am Beispiel Pernambuco (1840-1889). Munich: Wilhelm Fink, 1985. 4087. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Brésil: le royaume noir des ‘Mocambos’,” L’histoire, 41 (Jan. 1982), pp. 38-48. 4088. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Buraco de Tatú: The Destruction of a Bahian Quilombo,” in Verhandlungen der XXXVIII Internationalen Amerikanistenkongresses (Stuttgart-Munich, 1968) (München: K. Renner, 1969), vol. 3, pp. 429-38. 4089. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Free Labor in a Slave Economy: The Lavradores de cana of Colonial Bahia,” in Dauril Alden, ed., Colonial Roots of Modern Brazil (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1973), pp. 147-97. 4090. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Indian Labor and New World Plantations: European Demands and Indian Responses in Northeastern Brazil,” American Historical Review, 83, 1 (1978), pp. 43-79. 4091. Schwartz, Stuart B. “The Manumission of Slaves in Colonial Brazil: Bahia, 16841745,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 54, 4 (1974), pp. 603-35. Translated as “A manumissão dos escravos no Brasil colonial: Bahia, 1684-1745,” Anais de história, 6 (1974), pp. 71-114. 4092. Schwartz, Stuart B. “The Mocambo: Slave Resistance in Colonial Bahia,” Journal of Social History, 3, 4 (1970), pp. 313-33. Reprinted in Price, ed., Maroon Societies, pp. 202-26. 4093. Schwartz, Stuart B. “A população escrava na Bahia,” in Iraci del Nero da Costa, org., Brasil: história econômica e demográfica (São Paulo: Instituto de Pesquisas Econômicas, 1986), pp. 37-76. 4094. Schwartz, Stuart B. “Sugar Plantation Labor and Slave Life in the Brazilian Slave Regime” (Paper presented to conference on “Cultivation and Culture: Labor and the Shaping of Slave Life in the Americas”, University of Maryland, 12-14 April 1989). 288 4095. Schwartz, Stuart B. Sugar Plantations in the Formation of Brazilian Society: Bahia, 15501835. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986. Translated as Segredos internos: engenhos e escravos na sociedade colonial (Rio de Janeiro: Companhia das Letras/CNPq, 1988). 4096. Sena, Consuelo Pondé de. Portugueses e africanos em Inhambupe, 1750-1850. Salvador: Universidade Federal, Centro de Estudos Baianos, 1977. (Publicação no. 33) 4097. Silva, Jônatas C. da. “História de lutas negras: memórias do surgimento do movimento negro na Bahia,” in Reis, ed., Escravidão e invenção da liberdade, pp. 275-88. 4098. Silva, Leonardo Dantas, coord. A abolição em Pernambuco. Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Editora Massangana, 1988. 4099. Subsídios para o estudo da abolição: guia da sala “A Imprensa pernambucana e a abolição”. Recife: Fundação Joaquim Nabuco/Editora Massangana, 1983. 4100. Taylor, Kit Sims. “The Economics of Sugar and Slavery in Northeastern Brazil,” Agricultural History, 44, 3 (1970), pp. 267-80. 4101. Titton, Gentil Avelino. “O sínodo da Bahia (1707) e a escravatura,” in Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 285-306. 4102. Verger, Pierre. “L’esclavage à Bahia au XIXe siècle,” Cahiers des Amériques latines, 2 (1968), pp. 73-129. 4103. Viana, Luiz. O negro na Bahia. Rio de Janeiro: J. Olympio, 1946. 4104. Vidal, Adhemar. “Tres séculos de escravidão na Parahyba,” Estudos afro-brasileiros o (1 Congresso Afro-Brasileiro, Recife, 1934) (Rio de Janeiro, 1935), pp. 105-32. 4105. Winters, Clyde-Ahmad. “The Afro-Brazilian Concept of Jihad and the 1835 Slave Revolt,” Afrodiáspora, 2, 4 (1984), pp. 87-91. 4. Center-South 4106. Alencastro, Luiz-Felipe de. “Prolétaires et esclaves: immigrés portugais et captifs africains à Rio de Janeiro - 1850-1872,” Cahiers du Centre de recherches ibériques et ibéroaméricaines de l’Université de Rouen (C.R.I.A.R.), 4 (1984), pp. 119-56. Translated as “Proletários portugueses e cativos africanos no Rio de Janeiro, 18501872,” Novos estudos CEBRAP (Centro brasileiro de análise e planejamento), no. 21 (1988), pp. 30-56. 4107. Algranti, Leila Mezan. “O feitor ausente: estudo sobre a escravidão urbana no Rio de Janeiro 1808-1821” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade de São Paulo, 1986). 4108. Algranti, Leila Mezan. O feitor ausente: estudos sobre a escravidão urbana no Rio de Janeiro - 1808-1822. Petrópolis: Vozes, 1988. 4109. Algranti, Leila Mezan. “Os registros da Polícia e seu aproveitamento para a história do Rio de Janeiro: escravos e libertos,” Revista de história (São Paulo), 119 (1985-88), pp. 115-25. 289 4110. Algranti, Leila Mezan. “Slave Crimes: The Use of Police Power to Control the Slave Population of Rio de Janeiro,” Luso-Brazilian Review, 25, 1 (1988), pp. 27-48. 4111. Almada, Vilma Paraíso Ferreira de. “A escravidão na história econômico-social do Espírito Santo, 1850-1888” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Federal Fluminense, 1981). 4112. Almada, Vilma Paraíso Ferreira de. Escravismo e transição: O Espírito Santo (18501888). Rio de Janeiro: Edições Graal, 1984. 4113. Andrada, Antônio Manoel Bueno de. “A abolição em São Paulo,” Revista do Arquivo municipal (São Paulo), 77 (1941), pp. 261-72. 4114. Andrade, Carlos Otávio de, and Salete Neme. “Quilombo: forma de resistência proposta histórico-arqueológica,” in Pinaud, et al., Insurreição negra e justiça, pp. 1-38. 4115. *Arruda, Terezinha de Jesus, and Elizabeth Madureira Siqueira. “Mão-de-obra ao pé da obra: a presença do índio no processo produtivo do Brasil colônia,” Leopoldianum: Revista de estudos e comunicações (Santos, Sociedade Visconde de São Leopoldo), 11 (no. 31) (1984), pp. 43-56. 4116. *Assis, B. F. Eugenio de. Levante dos escravos no Distrito de S. José do Queimado, municipio da Serra. Espirito Santo: Estado do Espirito Santo, 1948. 4117. Ávila, Cristina. “O negro no barroco mineiro: o caso da igreja do Rosário de Ouro Preto,” Revista brasileira de economia, 42, 2 (1988), pp. 69-76. 4118. Azeredo, Paulo Roberto de. “José Martins da Cruz Jobim: sua prioridade na percepção de um distúrbio hematológico hereditário em negros escravos africanos,” MAN (Mensário do Arquivo Nacional), 9, 1 (1978), pp. 3-6. 4119. *Azevedo, Célia Maria Marinho de. “O negro livre no imaginário das elites (racismo, imigrantismo e abolicionismo em São Paulo)” (Dissertação mestrado, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, 1985). 4120. Bacelar, Carlos [de Almeida]. “Fontes para a história da escravidão em São Paulo” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 77-80. 4121. *Bacelar, Carlos de Almeida, and Ana Silvia Volpi Scott. “Sobreviver na senzala: estudo da composição e continuidade das grandes escravarias paulistas, 1798-1818,” in Associação Brasileira de Estudos Populacionais (ABEP), ed., História da população: estudos sobre a América Latina (São Paulo: Fundação Sistema Estadual de Análise de Dados, 1990), pp. 213-17. 4122. Bandecchi, Brasil. “Legislação da Província de São Paulo sobre escravos,” Revista de história, 49 (no. 99) (1974), pp. 235-40. 4123. Barbosa, Waldemar de Almeida. Negros e quilombos em Minas Gerais. Belo Horizonte, 1972. 4124. Barbosa, Waldemar de Almeida. “O negro em Minas Gerais,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico de Minas Gerais, 14 (1969-70), pp. 309-18. 4125. Bergstresser, Rebecca Baird. “The Movement for the Abolition of Slavery in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1880-1889” (PhD diss., Stanford University, 1973). 290 4126. Boccia, Ana Maria Mathias, and Eneida Maria Malerbi. “O contrabando de escravos para São Paulo,” Revista de história, 56 (no. 112) (1977), pp. 321-79. 4127. Borges, Roberto. A economia escravista de Minas Gerais no século XIX. Belo Horizonte: CEDEPLAR, 1980. 4128. Bresciani, Maria Stella Martins. “Condições de vida do escravo na Província de São Paulo no século XIX,” Revista do Arquivo municipal (São Paulo), 42 (no. 192) (1979), pp. 7-95. 4129. Cambraia, Ricardo de Bastos, and Fábio Faria Mendes. “A colonização dos sertões do este mineiro: políticas de ocupação territorial num regime escravista (17801836),” Revista brasileira de economia, 42, 2 (1988), pp. 137-50. 4130. Canabrava, Alice Piffer. “Terras e escravos na grande lavoura paulista,” in Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (8th, Aracajú, 1975) (“A propriedade rural”) (São Paulo: ANPUH, 1976), vol. 3, pp. 889-98. 4131. Carvalho, José Murilo de. “As batalhas da abolição,” Estudos afro-asiáticos, 15 (1988), pp. 14-23. 4132. *Carvalho, Vânia Carneiro. “Aldeamento de índios,” Arquivo: Boletim histórico e informativo (São Paulo, Arquivo do Estado), 6, 1 (1985), pp. 19-26. 4133. Chalhoub, Sidney. “Medo branco de almas negras: escravos, libertos e republicanos na cidade do Rio,” Revista brasileira de história, 8, no. 16 (1988), pp. 83-105. 4134. Chalhoub, Sidney. “Slaves, Freedmen and the Politics of Freedom in Brazil: The Experience of Blacks in the City of Rio,” Slavery and Abolition, 10, 3 (1989), pp. 64-84. 4135. Chalhoub, Sidney, Gladys Ribeiro, and Martha de A. Esteves. “Trabalho escravo e trabalho livre na cidade do Rio: vivência de libertos, ‘galegos’, e mulheres pobres,” Revista brasileira de história, 55, 8-9 (1984-85), pp. 85-116. 4136. Cláudio, Afonso. Insurreição do Queimado: episódio da história da Província do Espírito Santo. Vitória: Editora da Fundação Ceciliano Abel de Almeida, 1979. 4137. Coelho, Lucinda Coutinho de Mello. “Mão-de-obra escrava na mineração e tráfico negreiro no Rio de Janeiro (Levantamento de fontes),” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 449-82. 4138. Costa, Iraci del Nero da. “Algumas características dos proprietários de escravos de Vila Rica,” Estudos econômicos, 11, 3 (1981), pp. 151-57. 4139. Costa, Iraci del Nero da. “Análise da morbidade nas Gerais (Villa Rica, 17991801),” Revista de história, 54 (no. 107) (1976), pp. 241-62. 4140. Costa, Iraci del Nero da. “Nota sobre a posse de escravos nos engenhos e engenhocas fluminenses (1778),” Revista do Instituto de estudos brasileiros, 28 (1988), pp. 11116. 4141. Costa, Iraci del Nero da. “Nota sobre ciclo de vida e posse de escravos,” História: questões e debates (Associação paranaense de história - APAH), 4, 6 (1983), pp. 121-27. 291 4142. Costa, Iraci del Nero da, and Horácio Gutiérrez. “Nota sobre casamentos de escravos em São Paulo e no Paraná (1830),” História: questões e debates (Associação paranaense de história - APAH), 5, 9 (1984), pp. 313-21. Translated as “Note sur le mariage des esclaves dans les régions de São Paulo et du Paraná (1830),” Annales de démographie historique (1986), pp. 49-57. 4143. Costa, Iraci del Nero da, and Nelson Hideiki Nozoe. “Elementos da estrutura de posse de escravos em Lorena no alvorecer do século XIX,” Estudos econômicos, 19, 2 (1989), pp. 319-45. 4144. Costa, Iraci del Nero da, and Robert W. Slenes. “Nota sobre alguns elementos estruturais da família escrava (Lorena, 1801),” Revista da SBPH, 4 (1987-88), pp. 9-16. 4145. Costa, Iraci del Nero da, Robert W. Slenes, and Stuart B. Schwartz. “A família escrava em Lorena (1801),” Estudos econômicos, 17, 2 (1987), pp. 245-95. 4146. *Costa, Nara Salleto da. “Considerações sobre a transição do trabalho escravo ao trabalho livre na economia cafeeira do Espírito Santo” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, 1985). 4147. *Costa, Vilma Peres. “Ferrovias e trabalho assalariado em São Paulo” (Dissertação mestrado, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, 1976). 4148. 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Dornas Filho, João. “As enforcadas de Sabará,” Investigações, 3 (no. 24), pp. 10105. 4156. Eisenberg, Peter L. “Ficando libre: as alforrias em Campinas no século XIX,” Estudos econômicos, 17, 2 (1987), pp. 175-216. 4157. Eisenberg, Peter L. “Sugar and Social Change in Brazil: Campinas, São Paulo, 1767-1830,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da V reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1986), pp. 203-16. 292 4158. El-Kareh, Almir Chaiban. “Atividades capitalistas em sociedade escravista: estudo de um caso, a Companhia da Estrada de Ferro de D. Pedro II de 1855 a 1865” (Dissertação de mestrado, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Niterói, Instituto de Ciências Humanas e Filosofia, 1975). 4159. Ellis Junior, Alfredo. “O negro no bandeirismo,” Anais do 3 Congresso SulRiograndense de História e Geografia (Porto Alegre, 1940), vol. 3, pp. 1571-94. 4160. Fausto, Boris. “Considerações acêrca de uma tese: escravidão nas áreas cafeeiras aspectos econômicos, sociais e ideológicos da desagregação do sistema escravista,” Revista de história (São Paulo), 31 (no. 63) (1965), pp. 231-39. 4161. Franco, Maria Sylvia de Carvalho. Homens livres na ordem escravocrata. São Paulo: Instituto de estudos brasileiros, 1969. 4162. Gandía, Enrique de. Los misiones jesuíticas y los bandeirantes paulistas. Buenos Aires: Editorial “La Facultad”, 1936. 4163. Gebara, Ademir. “Escravidão: fugas e controle social,” Estudos econômicos, 18 (no. especial) (1988), pp. 103-46. 4164. Gebara, Ademir. “O fazendeiro de escravos na cidade que cresce,” Anais de história, 9 (1977), pp. 127-39. 4165. Goldschmidt, Eliana. “Casamentos mistos de escravos em São Paulo colonial: garantias tomadas pelos senhores,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1988), pp. 179-81. 4166. 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Golgher, Isaías. “O negro e a mineração em Minas Gerais,” Revista brasileira de estudos políticos, 18 (1965), pp. 133-50. 4171. Graham, Richard. “Brazilian Slavery Re-examined: A Review Article,” Journal of Social History, 3, 4 (1970), pp. 431-53. 4172. Guerzoni Filho, Gilberto, and Luiz Roberto Netto. “Minas Gerais: índices de casamento da população livre e escrava na Comarca do Rio das Mortes,” Estudos econômicos, 18, 3 (1988), pp. 497-507. 293 4173. Guimarães, Carlos Magno. Uma negação da ordem escravista: quilombos em Minas Gerais no século XVIII. São Paulo: Ícone, 1988. 4174. Guimarães, Carlos Magno. “Os quilombos do século do ouro (Minas Gerais século XVIII),” Estudos econômicos, 18 (no. especial) (1988), pp. 7-43. Republished in Revista brasileira de economia, 42, 2 (1988), pp. 15-46. 4175. Guimarães, Carlos Magno, and Ana Lúcia Duarte Lanna. “Arqueologia de quilombos em Minas Gerais,” in Pedro Inácio Schmitz, ed., Pesquisas: Estudos de arqueologia e pré-história brasileira em memória de Alfredo Teodoro Rusins (São Leopoldo: Instituto Anchietano de Pesquisas, 1980), pp. 147-64. (Antropologia, 31) 4176. *Guimarães, Carlos Magno, and Liana Maria Reis. “Agricultura e escravidão em Minas Gerais (1700-1750),” Revista do Departamento de História (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte), 2 (1986), pp. 7-36. 4177. Higgins, Kathleen J. “Masters and Slaves in a Mining Society: A Study of Eighteenth-Century Sabará, Minas Gerais,” Slavery and Abolition, 11, 1 (1990), pp. 58-73. 4178. Higgins, Kathleen J. “The Slave Society in Eighteenth-Century Sabará: A Community Study in Colonial Brazil” (PhD diss., Yale University, 1987). 4179. Holloway, Thomas H. “Immigration and Abolition: The Transition from Slave to Free Labor in the São Paulo Coffee Zone,” in Dauril Alden and Warren Dean, eds., Essays Concerning the Socioeconomic History of Brazil and Portuguese India (Gainesville: University Presses of Florida, 1977), pp. 160-77. 4180. Janotti, Maria de Lourdes Monaco, and Suely Robles Reis de Queiroz. “Memória da escravidão em famílias negras de São Paulo (projeto de pesquisa),” Revista do Instituto de estudos brasileiros, 28 (1988), pp. 77-90. 4181. Karasch, Mary C. “The African Heritage of Rio de Janeiro,” in Pescatello, ed. Old Roots in New Lands, pp. 36-76. 4182. Karasch, Mary C. “Anastácia and the Slave Women of Rio de Janeiro,” in Lovejoy, ed., Africans in Bondage, pp. 79-105. 4183. Karasch, Mary C. “Forms of Manumission in Rio de Janeiro, 1807-1831,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 39-42. 4184. Karasch, Mary C. “From Porterage to Proprietorship: African Occupations in Rio de Janeiro, 1808-1850,” in Engerman and Genovese, eds., Race and Slavery, pp. 369-93. 4185. Karasch, Mary C. “Manumission in the City of Rio de Janeiro, 1807-1851” (Paper presented at the American Historical Association, San Francisco, 1973). 4186. Karasch, Mary C. Slave Life in Rio de Janeiro 1808-1850. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1987. 4187. Kiernan, James Patrick. “Baptism and Manumission in Brazil: Paraty, 1789-1822,” Social Science History, 3, 1 (1978), pp. 56-71. 4188. Kiernan, James Patrick. “The Manumission of Slaves in Colonial Brazil: Paraty, 1789-1822” (PhD diss., New York University, 1977). 294 4189. *Kuznesof, Elizabeth [Anne]. “Ilegitimidade, raça e laços de família no Brasil do século XIX: uma análise da informação de censos e de batismos para São Paulo e Rio de Janeiro,” in Associação Brasileira de Estudos Populacionais (ABEP), ed., História da população: estudos sobre a América Latina (São Paulo: Fundação Sistema Estadual de Análise de Dados, 1990), pp. 175-84. 4190. *Lanna, Ana Lúcia Duarte. “A transformação do trabalho: a passagem para o trabalho livre na Zona da Mata Mineira” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, 1985). 4191. Lara, Silvia Hunold. Campos da violência: escravos e senhores na Capitania do Rio de Janeiro 1750-1808. Rio de Janeiro: Paz e Terra, 1988. 4192. Lara, Sílvia Hunold. “Processos crimes: o universo das relações pessoais,” Anais do Museu Paulista, 33 (1984), pp. 153-61. 4193. *Leite, Ilka Boaventura. “Negros e viajantes estrangeiros em Minas Gerais: século XIX” (Tese de doutorado, Universidade de São Paulo, 1986). 4194. Leonzo, Nanci. “A questão servil em São Paulo no século XVII e o revisionismo ideológico da historiografia ‘liberal’,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da I reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1982), pp. 117-19. 4195. Levy, Barbara. “Participação da população livre e escrava numa codificação sócioprofissional do Rio de Janeiro (1850-1870): alguns aspectos,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 639-58. 4196. Lewkowicz, Ida. “Herança e relações familiares: os pretos forros nas Minas Gerais do século XVIII,” Revista brasileira de história, 9, no. 17 (1988), pp. 101-14 4197. Libby, Douglas Cole. “Historiografia e a formação social escravista mineira,” ACERVO: Revista do Arquivo Nacional (Rio de Janeiro), 3, 1 (1988), pp. 7-20. 4198. Libby, Douglas Cole. “Proto-industrialization in a Slave Society: The Case of Minas Gerais,” Journal of Latin American Studies, 23, 1 (1991), pp. 1-35. 4199. Libby, Douglas Cole. Trabalho escravo e capital estrangeiro no Brasil: o caso de Morro Velho. Belo Horizonte: Itatiaia, 1984. 4200. Libby, Douglas Cole. Transformação e trabalho em uma economia escravista: Minas Gerais no XIX. São Paulo: Editora Brasiliense, 1988. 4201. *Lima, Lana Lage da Gama. “A rebelião negra em Campos na última decada da escravidão” (Dissertação mestrado, Universidade Federal Fluminense, 1977). 4202. Lima, Lana Lage da Gama, and Renato Pinto Venâncio. “Os órfãos da lei: o abandono de crianças negras no Rio de Janeiro após 1871,” Estudos afro-asiáticos, 15 (1988), pp. 24-33. 4203. Lopes, José da Paz. “A presença de escravos negros em uma corporação religiosa mineira durante os séculos XVIII e XIX,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 2, pp. 325-27. 4204. Lowrie, Samuel Harman. “O elemento negro na população de São Paulo,” Revista do Arquivo municipal (São Paulo), 48 (1938), pp. 5-56. 295 4205. *Luna, Francisco Vidal. “Casamento de escravos em São Paulo: 1776, 1804, 1829,” in Associação Brasileira de Estudos Populacionais (ABEP), ed., História da população: estudos sobre a América Latina (São Paulo: Fundação Sistema Estadual de Análise de Dados, 1990), pp. 226-36. 4206. Luna, Francisco Vidal. “Estrutura de posse de escravos e atividades produtivas em Jacareí (1777 a 1829),” Revista do Instituto de estudos brasileiros, 28 (1988), pp. 23-36. 4207. Luna, Francisco Vidal. “Estrutura da posse de escravos em Minas Gerais (1804),” in Iraci del Nero da Costa, org., Brasil: história econômica e demográfica (São Paulo: Instituto de Pesquisas Econômicas, 1986), pp. 157-72. 4208. Luna, Francisco Vidal. Minas Gerais: escravos e senhores: análise da estrutura populacional e econômica de alguns centros mineratórios (1718-1804). São Paulo: Instituto de Pesquisas Econômicas, 1981. 4209. Luna, Francisco Vidal, and Wilson Cano. “A reprodução natural de escravos em Minas Gerais (século XIX): uma hipótese,” Cadernos IFCH/UNICAMP (Instituto de filosofia e Ciências Humanas, Universidade Estadual de Campinas), 10 (1983), pp. 1-14. Translated as Wilson Cano and Francisco Vidal Luna, “La reproducción natural de los esclavos en Minas Gerais: una hipótesis,” Revista latinoamericana de historia económica y social, no. 4 (1984), pp. 129-35. 4210. Luna, Francisco Vidal, and Iraci del Nero da Costa. “Algumas características do contingente de cativos em Minas Gerais,” Anais do Museu Paulista, 29 (1979), pp. 79-97. 4211. Luna, Francisco Vidal, and Iraci del Nero da Costa. “Estrutura da massa escrava de algumas localidades mineiras (1804),” Revista do Instituto de estudos brasileiros, 23 (1981), pp. 137-42. 4212. Luna, Francisco Vidal, and Iraci del Nero da Costa. “Posse de escravos em São Paulo no início do século XIX,” Estudos econômicos, 13, 1 (1983), pp. 211-22. 4213. Luna, Francisco Vidal, and Iraci del Nero da Costa. “A presença do elemento forro no conjunto de proprietários de escravos,” Ciência e cultura (São Paulo), 32, 7 (1980), pp. 836-41. 4214. Luna, Francisco Vidal, and Iraci del Nero da Costa. “Vila Rica: Nota sobre casamentos de escravos (1727-1826),” Africa (São Paulo), 4 (1981), pp. 105-09. 4215. Luna, Francisco Vidal, and Herbert S. Klein. “Slaves and Masters in Early Nineteenth-Century Brazil: São Paulo,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 21, 4 (1991), pp. 549-73. 4216. Machado, Humberto Fernandes. “Escravos, senhores e café: um estudo sobre a crise da cafeicultura do Vale do Paraíba fluminense, 1860-1888” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Federal Fluminense, 1983). 4217. Machado, Humberto Fernandes. “A imprensa abolicionista,” Ciência hoje, 8 (no. 48, suplemento) (1988), pp. 22-27. 4218. Machado, Maria Helena Pereira Toledo. Crime e escravidão: trabalho, luta, resistência na lavouras paulistas, 1830-1888. São Paulo: Editora Brasiliense, 1987. 296 4219. Machado, Maria Helena Pereira Toledo. “Trabalho, compensação e crime: estratégias e contra-estratégias,” Estudos econômicos, 18 (no. especial) (1988), pp. 81-102. 4220. Machado [Filho], Aires da Mata. O negro e o garimpo em Minas Gerais. Rio de Janeiro: José Olimpio, 1943. 4221. Machado Filho, Aires da Mata. O negro e o Garimpo em Minas Gerais. (New ed.) Belo Horizonte: Editora Itatiaia, 1985. 4222. Maestri Filho, Mário José. “‘É como eu digo: de agora, depois da libertação, ‘tamo na glória’: depoimento de Mariano Pereira dos Santos (1868/1982), ex-escravo, Hospital Erasto Goertner, Curitiba, julho 1982,” História: questões e debates (Associação paranaense de história - APAH), 4, 6 (1983), pp. 81-97. 4223. Martins, José de Souza. A escravidão em São Caetano (1598-1871). São Caetano do Sul: Associação Cultural, Recreativa e Esportiva Luís Gama, 1988. 4224. Martins, Roberto Borges. “Growing in Silence: The Slave Economy of Nineteenth-Century Minas Gerais, Brazil” (PhD diss., Vanderbilt University, 1980). 4225. Martins, Roberto Borges. “Growing in Silence: The Slave Economy of Nineteenth-Century Minas Gerais, Brazil,” Journal of Economic History, 42, 1 (1982), pp. 22223. 4226. 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Metamorfoses da riqueza: São Paulo, 1845-1895: contribuição ao estudo da passagem da economia mercantil-escravista á economia exportadora capitalista. São Paulo: Secretaria Municipal de Cultura, 1985. 4231. *Metcalf, Alida C. “A família escrava no Brasil Colonial: um estudo de caso em São Paulo,” in Associação Brasileira de Estudos Populacionais (ABEP), ed., História da população: estudos sobre a América Latina (São Paulo: Fundação Sistema Estadual de Análise de Dados, 1990), pp. 205-12. 4232. Metcalf, Alida C. “Searching for the Slave Family in Colonial Brazil: A Reconstruction from São Paulo,” Journal of Family History, 16, 3 (1991), pp. 283-97. 297 4233. Metcalf, Alida C. “Vida familiar dos escravos em São Paulo no século dezoito: o caso de Santana de Parnaíba,” Estudos econômicos, 17, 2 (1987), pp. 229-44. 4234. Monteiro, John M. “Celeiro do Brasil: escravidão indígena e a agricultura paulista no século XVII,” História (São Paulo), 7 (1988), pp. 1-12. 4235. Monteiro, John M. “From Indian to Slave: Forced Native Labour and Colonial Society in São Paulo during the Seventeenth Century,” Slavery and Abolition, 9, 2 (1988), pp. 105-27. 4236. Monteiro, John M. “The Transition from Indian to African Slavery in São Paulo” (Unpublished paper, Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, Washington, D.C., 1987). 4237. Morse, Richard M. “The Negro in São Paulo, Brazil,” Journal of Negro History, 38, 3 (1953), pp. 290-306. 4238. Morton, G. Nash. “Fazenda de Ibicada,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico de São Paulo, 23 (1925), pp. 255-78. 4239. *Mott, Luiz R. B. “Acontunda: raízes setecentistas do sincretismo religioso afrobrasileiro,” Revista do Museu Paulista, n.s. 31 (1986), pp. 124-47. 4240. Mott, Luiz R. B. “Uma santa africana no Brasil colonial,” D. O. Leitura (São Paulo), 6 (no. 62) (1987), p. 4. 4241. 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O escravo numa economia minifundiária. São Paulo: Editora Resenha Universitária, 1975. 4257. Pinaud, João Luiz Duboc. “Senhor, escravo e direito: interpretação semânticopolítica,” in Pinaud, et al., Insurreição negra e justiça, pp. 39-112. 4258. Pinaud, João Luiz Duboc, Carlos Otávio de Andrade, Salete Neme, Maria Cândida Gomes de Souza, and Jeannette Queiroz Garcia. Insurreição negra e justiça: Paty do Alferes, 1838. Rio de Janeiro: Expressão e Cultura (Ordem dos Advogados do Brasil), 1987. For contents see Andrade and Neme, Garcia, Pinaud, and Souza. 4259. Pinto, Luiz de Aguiar Costa. O negro no Rio de Janeiro, relações de raças numa sociedade em mudança. São Paulo: Companhia Editora Nacional, c. 1953. 4260. Priore, Mary Del. A maternidade da mulher negra no período colonial brasileiro. São Paulo: Centro de Estudos de Demografia Histórica da América Latina, 1989. (Estudos CEDHAL 4) 4261. *Queiroz, Maria Isaura Pereira de. “Escravos e mobilidade social vertical em dois romances do século XIX,” Cadernos do Centro de estudos rurais e urbanos (São Paulo), 9 (1976), pp. 39-58. 4262. Queiroz, Maria Isaura Pereira de. “Viajantes, século XIX: negras escravas e livres no Rio de Janeiro,” Revista do Instituto de estudos brasileiros, 28 (1988), pp. 53-76. 4263. Queiroz, Suely Robles Reis de. “Algumas notas sôbre a lavoura do açúcar em São Paulo no período colonial,” Anais do Museu Paulista, 21 (1967), pp. 109-277. 4264. Queiroz, Suely Robles Reis de. Escravidão negra em São Paulo. Rio de Janeiro: Livraria José Olympio Editora, 1977. 4265. Queiroz, Suely Robles Reis de. “Uma insurreição de escravos em Campinas,” Revista de história, 49 (no. 99) (1974), pp. 193-234. 299 4266. Ramos, Donald. “Community, Control and Acculturation: A Case Study of Slavery in Eighteenth Century Brazil,” Americas, 42, 4 (1986), pp. 419-51. 4267. Ramos, Donald. “Slavery in Brazil: A Case Study of Diamantina, Minas Gerais,” Americas, 45, 1 (1988), pp. 47-59. 4268. Reis, Liana Maria. “Escravos e abolicionismo na imprensa mineira (1850-1888),” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 287-98. 4269. Renault, Delso. Indústria, escravidão, sociedade: uma pesquisa historiográfica do Rio de Janeiro no século XIX. Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasileira, 1976. 4270. Ricardo, Cassiano. “O negro no bandeirismo paulista,” Revista do Arquivo municipal (São Paulo), 47 (1938), pp. 5-46. 4271. Ricci, Maria Lúcia. “A imprensa negra paulista,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 6570. 4272. Russell-Wood, A. J. R. “Technology and Society: The Impact of Gold Mining on the Institution of Slavery in Portuguese America,” Journal of Economic History, 37, 1 (1977), pp. 59-86. Reprinted as “The Other Slavery: Gold Mining and the ‘Peculiar Institution’,” in idem, Black Man in Slavery and Freedom, pp. 104-27. 4273. Saletto, Nara. “Transição do trabalho escravo para o trabalho livre e pequena propriedade: o caso de Espírito Santo,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VI reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1987), pp. 165-68. 4274. *Samara, Eni de Mesquita. “Familias e domicílios em sociedades escravistas (São Paulo no século XIX),” in Associação Brasileira de Estudos Populacionais (ABEP), ed., História da população: estudos sobre a América Latina (São Paulo: Fundação Sistema Estadual de Análise de Dados, 1990), pp. 164-74. 4275. Santos, Ana Maria dos. “A substituição do trabalho escravo e os projetos de reforma na agricultura no Rio de Janeiro, 1871-1888,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 117-22. 4276. 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Cerqueira, Beatriz Westin de. “Um estudo da escravidão em Ubatuba,” Estudos históricos (Marília), 5 (1966), pp. 7-58; 6 (1967), pp. 9-66. 4323. Conforto, Marília. “Breves considerações sobre a criminalidade escrava segundo o ‘Livro de sentenciados’ da Casa de Correção de Porto Alegre (1874-1900),” Estudos iberoamericanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 69-78. 4324. *Correa, Nórton. “As religiões afro-gaúchas” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 4325. *Corsetti, Berenice. “Estudo da charqueada escravista gaúcha no século XIX” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Federal Fluminense, 1983). 4326. *Costa, Dora Isabel Paiva de. “O comércio de escravos na comarca de Bananeiras, Província da Paraíba (1860-1888)” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 303 4327. 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El Murr, Victoria Namestnikov, and Joubran Jamil El Murr. “Fontes primárias do Município de Porto Belo (SC) (Escrituras referentes à compra e venda de escravos),” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 2, pp. 429-32. 4332. *Ericksen, Nestor. “O negro no Rio Grande do Sul: subsídios para a história da escravidão no Brasil,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico do Rio Grande do Sul, 21, 4 (no. 84). 4333. Ericksen, Nestor. O Negro no Rio Grande do Sul (Subsidios para a história da escravidão no Brasil). Porto Alegre: Of. Graf. da Libraria do Globo, 1941. 4334. Ericksen, Nestor. O negro no Rio Grande no sesquicentenário da imprensa rio-grandense. Porto Alegre: Sulina, 1977. 4335. Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), special issue: “I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra” (ed. Mário Maestri [Filho]). (See Maestri [Filho] for listing of contents.) 4336. *Falcão, Luiz Felipe. “O assassinato do escravo Delgício: um ensaio de abordagem pós-moderna da história” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 4337. Ferrarini, Sebastião. A escravidão negra na Província do Paraná. Curitiba: Editôra Lítero-Técnica, 1971. 4338. Flores, Moacyr. “O Partenon literário e abolição da escravatura em Porto Alegre,” in idem., org., Cultura afro-brasileira (Porto Alegre: Escola Superior de Teologia São Lourenço de Brindes, 1980), pp. 19-24. 4339. Gattiboni, Rita. “Cartas de alforria em Rio Grande (1874-9/1884-9),” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 117-36. 4340. Gertze, Jurema Mazuhy. “Notas para o estudo da mortalidade infantil entre a população escrava no Rio Grande do Sul (1850-1872),” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 137-59. 4341. Graf, Márcia Elisa de Campos. “De agredidos a agressores: um estudo sobre as relações sociais entre senhores e escravos no Paraná do século XIX,” Estudos econômicos, 18 (no. especial) (1988), pp. 147-66. 304 4342. Graf, Márcia Elisa de Campos. “Entrevista com Mariano Pereira dos Santos, um ex-escravo de 122 anos,” Revista da SBPH (Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica), 3 (1986-87), pp. 117-24. 4343. Graf, Márcia Elisa de Campos. “Estudo dos escravos no Paraná: exemplo de algumas aproximações possíveis (matrículas, imprensa periódica, testamentos, inventários, registros de compra e venda, cartas de alforria, etc.),” in Adeline Daumard, Altiva Pilatti Balhana, Cecília Maria Westphalen, and Márcia Elisa de Campos Graf, História social do Brasil: teoria e metodologia (Curitiba: Editora da Universidade Federal do Paraná, 1984), pp. 227-32. Translated as “Une étude des esclaves d’origine africaine dans le Sud du Brésil (Paraná): exemple de quelques approches possibles dans le regroupement de différentes sources, pour l’élaboration d’une synthèse” (Colloque international pour le tricentenaire du Code Noir, Dakar, 21-26 July 1986). 4344. Graf, Márcia Elisa de Campos. “Family Relationships Among Slaves of African Origin: A Study of a Community in Southern Brazil” (Unpublished paper, 47th International Congress of Americanists, 7-11 July 1991, New Orleans). 4345. Graf, Márcia Elisa de Campos. Imprensa periódica e escravidão no Paraná. Curitiba: Grafipar, e Secretaria de Estado da Cultura e do Esporte do Paraná, 1981. 4346. Graf, Márcia Elisa de Campos. “Os mecanismos da alforria na Província do Paraná, século XIX,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 43-46. 4347. Graf, Márcia Elisa de Campos. “A mulher escrava na sociedade paranaense do Século XIX,” Sociedade Brasileira de Pesquisa Histórica (SBPH), Anais da X Reunião da SBPH (Curitiba, 1990) (Curitiba: SBPH, 1991), pp. 257-59. 4348. Graf, Márcia Elisa de Campos. “População escrava da província do Paraná a partir das listas de classificação para emancipação 1873-1886” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Federal do Paraná, 1974). 4349. Graf, Márcia Elisa de Campos. “A propaganda abolicionista e a republicana através da imprensa periódica: o exemplo do Paraná,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1988), pp. 65-66. 4350. Graf, Márcia Elisa de Campos. “Une société esclavagiste dans le Sud du Brésil (Paraná): de l’extinction de la traite à l’abolition de l’esclavage (1831/1850-1888),” in Daget, ed., De la traite à l’esclavage, vol. 2, pp. 645-58. 4351. Guimarães, Carlos Magno. “O quilombo do Ambrósio: lenda, documentos e arqueologia,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 161-74. 4352. Gutfreind, Ieda. “O negro on Rio Grande do Sul: o vazio historiográfico,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 175-87. 4353. *Gutiérrez, Horácio. “Casamentos nas senzalas Paraná 1800-1830” (Unpublished, IIo Semenário, Centenário da abolição do escravismo da época colonial à situação do negro na actualidade, Instituto de Pesquisas Econômicas, São Paulo, 1986). 305 4354. Gutiérrez, Horácio. “Crioulos e africanos no Paraná, 1798-1830,” Revista brasileira de história, 8, no. 16 (1988), pp. 161-88. 4355. Gutiérrez, Horácio. “Demografia escrava numa economia no-exportadora: Paraná, 1800-1830,” Estudos econômicos, 17, 2 (1987), pp. 297-314. 4356. Gutiérrez, Horácio. “A harmonia entre sexos: elementos da estrutura demográfica da população escrava no Paraná,” Anais do V Encontro nacional de estudos populacionais (São Paulo, 1986) (São Paulo: Associação Brasileira de Estudos Populacionais, 1986), pp. 35-52. 4357. *Gutiérrez, Horácio. “Posse de escravos no Paraná nas primeiras decadas do século XIX” (Mimeo, XIII Simpósio Nacional de História, ANPUH, Curitiba, 1985). 4358. Ianni, Octavio. As metamorfoses do escravo: apogeu e crise da escravatura no Brasil meridional. São Paulo: Difusão Européia do Livro, 1962. 4359. *Isecksohn, Vitor. “A escravidão face ao discurso da espada: os escravos e a Guerra do Paraguai” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 4360. *Laytano, Dante de. Alguns aspectos da história do negro no Rio Grande do Sul. Porto Alegre: Kosmos, 1942. (Rio Grande do Sul, Imagem da Terra Gaucha) 4361. Laytano, Dante de. “O negro e o espírito guerreiro nas origens do Rio Grande do Sul,” Revista do Instituto histórico e geográfico do Rio Grande do Sul, 17, 1 (no. 65), pp. 95-117. 4362. Laytano, Dante de. “O negro no Rio Grande do Sul,” in Primeiro Seminário de Estudos Gaúchos (Universidade Católica, Porto Alegre, 3-4 Oct. 1957) (Porto Alegre, 1957), pp. 27-106. Reprinted in Moacyr Flores, org., Cultura afro-brasileira (Porto Alegre: Escola Superior de Teologia São Lourenço de Brindes, 1980), pp. 11-18. 4363. Leitman, Spencer L. “The Black Ragamuffins: Racial Hypocrisy in Nineteenth Century Southern Brazil,” Americas, 33, 3 (1977), pp. 504-18. 4364. Leitman, Spencer L. “Slave Cowboys in the Cattle Lands of Southern Brazil, 1800-1850,” Revista de história, 51 (no. 101) (1975), pp. 167-77. 4365. Leitman, Spencer L. “Slavery and Racial Democracy in Southern Brazil: A Look Back to the 19th Century,” Présence africaine, 89 (1974), pp. 227-33. 4366. *León, Zênia. “O negro em Pelotas” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 4367. Machado, Nara H. N. “A igreja de N. S. do Rosário dos Pretos,” Estudos iberoamericanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 189-96. 4368. Maestri Filho, Mário José. “A charqueada escravista: algumas considerações,” História em cadernos (Rio de Janeiro: UFRJ-IFCS, Mestrado em História), 2, 1 (1984), pp. 1117. 4369. Maestri [Filho], Mário José. “Considerações sobre o cativeiro do ‘negro da terra’ no Brasil quinhentista,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 197-210. 306 4370. Maestri Filho, Mário José. O escravo gaúcho: resisténcia e trabalho. São Paulo: Brasiliense, 1984. 4371. Maestri Filho, Mário José. O escravo no Rio Grande do Sul: a charqueada e a gênese do escravismo gaúcho. Caxias do Sul: Editora da Universidade de Caxias do Sul, 1984. 4372. Maestri Filho, Mário José. “A origem do escravo gaúcho e a capitania do Rio Grande de São Pedro do Sul,” Revista do Departamento de biblioteconomia e história (Fundação Universidade do Rio Grande), 1, 1 (1978), pp. 13-54. 4373. Maestri Filho, Mário José. “. . . quando gritô a liberdade . . . ah! Meu Deus! como a negrada gritava, como a negrada cantava, como a negrada dançava . . .,” Ciência e cultura, 37, 5 (1985), pp. 828-34. 4374. Maestri Filho, Mário José. Quilombos e quilombolas em terras gaúchas. Porto Alegre: Escola Superior de Teologia São Lourenço de Brindes, Caxias do Sul: Universidade de Caxias, 1979. 4375. Maestri Filho, Mário José. “A redução do cidadão José Martins, uruguaio, à escravidão: um documento,” Revista do Departamento de biblioteconomia e história (Fundação Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul), 1, 2 (1979), pp. 37-44. 4376. Maestri [Filho], Mário José, ed. “I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), special issue. For contents see Altezor, Assumpção, Bakos, Barroso, Conforto, Costa, Elmir, Faustino, Gattiboni, Gertze, Guimarães, Gutfreind, Machado, Maestri, Moreira, Ochoa, Pezat, Piazza, Piccolo, Reichel, Reis, Ricci, Santos, Simão, and Vecchia. 4377. Maestri Filho, Mário José, ed. “Intervista storica a una ex-schiava nel sud del Brasile,” Quaderni di storia, 12, no. 23 (1986), pp. 153-72. 4378. *Mauch, Cláudia. “Colônia africana: criminalidade e controle social - Porto Alegre (1888-1890)” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 4379. *Mello, Marco Antônio Lírio de. “Mecanismos de resistência à escravidão negra em Pelotas (1840-1884)” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990) 4380. Moreira, Earle D. M[acarthy]. “Abolição e República: temática rio-grandense,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1988), pp. 67-72. 4381. Moreira, Paulo Roberto S. “Os contratados: uma forma de escravidão disfarçada,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 211-24. 4382. *Moreira, Paulo Roberto S. “Entre o deboche e a rapina: escravismo, urbanização e resistência” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 4383. *Moreira, Paulo Roberto S. “Escravos, vadios e desertores: as classes perigosas nos aparelhos repressivos do estado escravista” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 307 4384. *Motta, [José] Flávio de Mattos. “Um quilombo na Serra dos Tapes: o quilombo de Manuel Padeiro” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 4385. Motta, [José] Flávia de Mattos. “Pelotas e o Quilombo de Manuel Padeiro na conjuntura da Revolução Farroupilha,” Revista do Instituto de filosofia e ciências humanas (Porto Alegre, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul), 13 (1985), pp. 111-15. 4386. Neis, Pe Ruben. “A Igreja e o movimento abolicionista,” in Moacyr Flores, org., Cultura afro-brasileira (Porto Alegre: Escola Superior de Teologia São Lourenço de Brindes, 1980), pp. 25-28. 4387. *Oliveira, Márcia Ramos de, Paulo Roberto Moreira, and Luciana P. Coronel. “Rio Grande do Sul/Uruguai: fuga e reescravização” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 4388. Pedro, Joana Maria, Ligia de Oliveira Czesnat, Paulino F. de Jesus Cardoso, Luís Felipe Falcão, Orivalda Lima e Silva, and Rosângela M. Cherem. “Abolição e branqueamento,” Ciência hoje, 8 (no. 48, suplemento) (1988), pp. 28-30. 4389. Pena, Eduardo Spiller. “Escravos, libertos e imigrantes: fragmentos da transição em Curitiba na segunda metade do século XIX,” História: questões e debates (Associação paranaense de história - APAH), 9, no. 16 (1988), pp. 83-103. 4390. Pezat, Paulo Ricardo. “A conquista da liberdade pelo negro: consenso e contrasenso,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 231-29. 4391. Piazza, Walter F. “A escravidão numa área de Pastoreio: os ‘Campos’ de Lages,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 263-74. 4392. Piccolo, Helga [I. L.] “Considerações em tôrno da interpretação de leis abolicionistas numa província fronteiriça: Rio Grande do Sul,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 533-64. 4393. Piccolo, Helga [Iracema Landgraf]. “Escravidão, imigração e abolição: considerações sobre o Rio Grande do Sul do século XIX,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 5362. 4394. Piccolo, Helga [Iracema Landgraf]. “A questão da escravidão na revolução farroupilha,” Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da V reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1986), pp. 225-30. 4395. Piccolo, Helga [Iracema Landgraf]. “A resistência escrava no Rio Grande do Sul: reação ou afirmação,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 241-51. 4396. Piccolo, Helga [Iracema Landgraf]. “Século XIX: alemes protestantes no Rio Grande do Sul e a escravidão,” in Sociedade brasileira de pesquisa histórica (SBPH), Anais da VIII reunião anual da SBPH (São Paulo, 1989), pp. 103-08. 4397. Ricci, Maria Lúcia. “A guarda-negra no contexto brasileiro de final do século XIX,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 275-85. 4398. Salles, Ricardo. Guerra do Paraguai: escravidão e cidadania na formação do exército. São Paulo: Paz e Terra, 1990. 308 4399. *Salvani, Frei Nilo. “A mortalidade escrava em Porto Alegre (1850-1888)” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 4400. *Santos, Carlos Roberto Antunes dos. “L’économie et la société esclavagistes au Paraná (Brésil) de 1854 à 1887” (PhD diss., Université de Paris X - Nanterre, Lettres et Sciences Humaines, 1976). 4401. Santos, Carlos Roberto Antunes dos. “L’économie et la société esclavagistes au Paraná (Brésil) de 1854 à 1887,” Cahiers des Amériques latines, 19 (1979), pp. 101-11. 4402. Santos, Carlos Roberto Antunes dos. “Nota prévia sôbre preços e profissões de escravos na Província do Paraná,” in Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 2, pp. 409-27. 4403. Santos, Carlos Roberto Antunes dos. “Preços de escravos na província do Paraná, 1861-1887: estudos sobre as escrituras de compra e venda de escravos” (Tese de mestrado, Universidade Federal do Paraná, 1974). 4404. *Santos, Carlos Roberto Antunes dos. “Semiologia gráfica e histórica: o fichárioimagem como procedimento de tratamento gráfico da informação: os componentes do preço do escravo nos mercados paranenses, 1860-1887,” in Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (9th, Florianópolis, 1977) (“O homen e a técnica”) (São Paulo: ANPUH, 1979), vol. 2, pp. 815-46. 4405. Santos, Corcino Medeiros dos. “O trabalho escravo na grande propriedade rural: a fazenda de Santa Cruz,” Cultura (Brasília), 8 (no. 29) (1978), pp. 66-74. 4406. Santos, Graziela E. L. dos. “1985: sesquicentenário e escravidão negra: uma revisão historiográfica,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 299-308. 4407. *Santos, Luiz dos. “O negro e a universidade” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 4408. Simão, Falkembach. “As manumissões na cidade de Pelotas (1832-1849),” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 309-27. 4409. “I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra” (Porto Alegre, 9-12 Oct. 1990). Proceedings partially published in Maestri [Filho], ed., Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), special issue. See authors listed under editor’s name. For contents see Brancato, Correa, Costa, Falcão, Gorender, Izeckson, León, Mauch, Mello, Moreira (2), Mota, Oliveira/Moreira/Coronel, Salvani, P. R. dos Santos, L. dos Santos, and Westphalen. 4410. Spalding, Walter. “A escravatura em Porto-Alegre,” Anais do 3 Congresso SulRiograndense de História e Geografia (Porto Alegre, 1970), vol. 2, pp. 203-09. 4411. Valverde, Orlando. “A fazenda de café escravocrata no Brasil,” Revista brasileira de geografia, 29, 1 (1967), pp. 37-81. Republished as A fazenda de café escravocrata no Brasil (Rio de Janeiro: Ministério da Indústria e do Comércio; Instituto Brasileiro do Café, 1973). 309 Translated as La fazenda de café esclavista en el Brasil (trans. Luis Fernando Chaves Vargas). Mérida: Universidad de los Andes, 1965. 4412. Vecchia, Agostinho Maria Dala. “Memórias do cativeiro e transição,” Estudos ibero-americanos, 16, 1-2 (1990), pp. 329-44. 4413. Vieira da Cunha, Rui. “Escravos rebeldes em Porto Alegre,” MAN (Mensario do Arquivo nacional) (Rio de Janeiro), 9, 8 (no. 104) (1978), pp. 9-13. 4414. *Westphalen, Cecília [Maria]. “A escravaria no patrimônio do Barão dos Campos Gerais” (Unpublished paper presented to I Simpósio gaúcho sobre a escravidão negra, Porto Alegre, 9-12 October 1990). 6. West 4415. Aleixo, Lúcia Helena Gaeta. “Mato Grosso: trabalho escravo e trabalho livre (1850-1888)” (Tese de mestrado, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, 1980). 4416. *Doles, Dalísia Elizabeth Martins. “Fontes primárias relativas à escravidão em Pirenópolis,” in Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (9th, Florianópolis, 1977) (“O homen e a técnica”) (São Paulo: ANPUH, 1979), vol. 4, pp. 1061-115. 4417. Moraes, Maria Augusta de Santana. “O abolicionismo em Goiás,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 659-96. 4418. Moreyra, Sérgio Paulo, Dulce Helená Alvares Pessoa Ramos, and Katia Abud. “Arrolamento de fontes: livros de receita de siza de escravos ladinos da Capitania de Goiás (1810-1822),” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 2, pp. 433-86. 4419. Palacín, Luis. “Trabalho escravo: produção e produtividade nas minas de Goiás,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 433-48. 4420. Salles, Gilka Vasconcelos Ferreira [de]. “Economia e escravidão em Goiás colonial” (Dissertação, Universidade de São Paulo, 1981). 4421. Salles, Gilka Vasconcelos Ferreira de. “O trabalhador escravo em Goiás nos séculos XVIII e XIX,” Anais do VI Simpósio nacional dos professores universitários de história (Goiâna, 1971) (São Paulo, 1973), vol. 1, pp. 599-638. 4422. Salles, Gilka Vasconcelos Ferreira de, and Elizabeth Agel da Silva Dantas. “A escravidão negra na província de Goiás,” ACERVO: Revista do Arquivo Nacional (Rio de Janeiro), 3, 1 (1988), pp. 37-50. 4423. *Siqueira, Elizabeth Madureira. “O segmento indígena: uma tentativa de recuperação histórica,” Leopoldianum: Revista de estudos e comunicações (Santos, Sociedade Visconde de São Leopoldo), 12 (no. 33) (1985), pp. 129-41. V. CARIBBEAN 310 1. General and Comparative 4424. Alden, John. “The Struggle Against Slavery: The Caribbean Collections of the Boston Public Library,” Caribbean Archives/Archives antillaises/Archivos del Caribe, 2 (1974), pp. 7-12. 4425. *Alexandre, Mireille. “Le problème des races aux Antilles françaises et anglaises de 1800 à 1914 d’après les voyageurs” (Mémoire de maîtrise, Nanterre, 1970). 4426. Bangou, Henri. “L’abolition de l’esclavage dans la Caribe du point de vue de ses lois économiques et des initiatives humains,” in Le passage de la société esclavagiste à la société post-esclavagiste au 19e siècle (Colloque d’histoire antillaise, Point-à-Pitre, 1971) (Point-à-Pitre, GURIC, Centre d’Enseignement Supérieur Littéraire, 1969-71), vol. 1, pp. 4-22. 4427. Beckford, George. “The Continuing Influence of the Plantation: Toward a General Theory of Caribbean Society,” Savacou, 5 (1971), pp. 78-11-15. Reprinted in Delson, ed., Readings in Caribbean History and Economics, pp. 58-64. 4428. Beckles, Hilary McD. “Caribbean Anti-Slavery: the Self-Liberation Ethos of Enslaved Blacks,” Journal of Caribbean History, 22, 1-2 (1988), pp. 1-19. 4429. Beckles, Hilary McD. “The Entertainment Culture of Enslaved Blacks in the Caribbean: A View of Non-Violent Resistance” (Paper presented to “Born out of Resistance,” International and Interdisciplinary Congress on Caribbean Cultural Creativity as a Response to European Expansion, 23-28 March 1992, Center for Caribbean and Latin American Studies, Utrecht University). 4430. Beet, Chris de. “Maroons in Jamaica and in Suriname” (Paper presented to “Born out of Resistance,” International and Interdisciplinary Congress on Caribbean Cultural Creativity as a Response to European Expansion, 23-28 March 1992, Center for Caribbean and Latin American Studies, Utrecht University). 4431. Bilby, Kenneth M. “Oral Traditions in Two Maroon Societies: The Windward Maroons of Jamaica and the Aluku Maroons of French Guiana and Suriname” (Paper presented to “Born out of Resistance,” International and Interdisciplinary Congress on Caribbean Cultural Creativity as a Response to European Expansion, 23-28 March 1992, Center for Caribbean and Latin American Studies, Utrecht University). 4432. Boomgaard, Peter, and Gert J. Oostindie. “Changing Sugar Technology and the Labour Nexus: the Caribbean, 1750-1900,” Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 63, 1-2 (1989), pp. 322. 4433. Bremer, Thomas. “Haití como paradigma: la emancipación de los esclavos en el Caribe y la literatura europea,” Anales del Caribe (Havana, Centro de estudios del Caribe), 78 (1987-88), pp. 108-25. 4434. Bush, Barbara. Slave Women in Caribbean Society, 1650-1838. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990. 4435. Bush, Barbara. “Slave Women in the Caribbean 1650-1838” (Paper presented to “Born out of Resistance,” International and Interdisciplinary Congress on Caribbean 311 Cultural Creativity as a Response to European Expansion, 23-28 March 1992, Center for Caribbean and Latin American Studies, Utrecht University). 4436. Cardoso, Ciro Flamerión S. “Systèmes esclavagistes et dynamiques de population,” Bulletin du Centre d’histoire des espaces atlantiques, 2 (1985), pp. 175-78. 4437. *Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S. “Les économies esclavagistes dans l’aire des Caraïbes aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles: études comparées” (Thèse, Université de Paris X, 1976). 4438. *Cardoso, Ciro Flamarión S. “Método comparativo y técnicas de producción: el caso de las colonias esclavistas (siglo XVIII)” (Unpublished paper, III Simposio de historia económica de América latina, XLI International Congress of Americanists, Mexico, 1972). 4439. “Changing Sugar Technology and the Labour Nexus: the Caribbean, 1750-1900,” Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 63, 1-2 (1989), special issue. (Papers from 46th International Congress of Americanists [Amsterdam, 4-8 July 1988], panel convened by Peter Boomgaard and Gert J. Oostindie) For contents see Boomgaard and Ooostindie, Craton, Scarano, Sheridan, Tomich, and van Stipriaan. 4440. Clarke, Colin. “Slavery and Dependency: Studies in Caribbean Subordination (review essay: Sheridan, Doctors and Slaves, Turner, Slaves and Missionaries, Fraginals, Pons, and Engerman, eds., Between Slavery and Free Labour, inter alia),” Journal of Latin American Studies, 19, 1 (1987), pp. 157-67. 4441. Clarke, John Henrik. “Slave Revolts in the Caribbean Islands,” Présence africaine, 84 (1972), pp. 117-30. Also as “Slave Revolt in the Caribbean,” Black World, 22, 4 (1973), pp. 12-25. 4442. Colloque d’histoire antillaise (1969). Le passage de la société esclavagiste à la société postesclavagiste aux Antilles au XIXe siècle. 2 vols. Pointe-à-Pitre, 1971. For contents see Bangou, and Hall. 4443. Craton, Michael M. “Commentary (on “Changing Sugar Technology and the Labour Nexus: the Caribbean, 1750-1900”): the Search for a Unified Field Theory,” Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 63, 1-2 (1989), pp. 135-42. 4444. Craton, Michael M. “From Caribs to Black Caribs: The Amerindian Roots of Servile Resistance in the Caribbean,” in Okihiro, ed., In Resistance, pp. 96-116. 4445. Delson, Roberta Marx, ed. Readings in Caribbean History and Economics: An Introduction to the Region. New York: Gordon and Breasch Science Publishers, 1981. For contents see Beckford and Handler. 4446. Dirks, Robert. “The Black Saturnalia and Relief Induced Agonism,” in Kenneth F. Kiple, ed., The African Exchange: Toward a Biological History of the Black People (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1988), pp. 167-94. 4447. Dirks, Robert. “Resource Fluctuations and Competitive Transformation in West Indian Slave Societies,” in Charles D. Laughlin, Jr., and Ivan A. Brady, eds., Extinction and Survival in Human Populations (New York: Columbia University Press, 1978), pp. 122-80. 312 4448. Dirks, Robert. “Slaves Holiday,” Natural History, 84, 10 (1975), pp. 82-91. Reprinted in David Rosen, ed., Readings in Anthropology 77/78 (Gilford: Dushkin Publishing, 1977); also in idem, Readings in Anthropology 80/81 (Gilford: Dushkin Publishing, 1979). 4449. Dupuy, Alex. “Slavery and Underdevelopment in the Caribbean: A Critique of the ‘Plantation Economy’ Perspective,” Dialectical Anthropology, 7, 3 (1983), pp. 237-51. 4450. *Emmer, Pieter C. “Die Fesseln gebrochen? Die Abschaffung der west-indischen Sklaverei in Theorie und Praxis,” Vorträge zur Wirtschafts- und Überseegeschichte, 7 (1982). 4451. Emmer, P[ieter]. C. “Slavensiekten en sigaren: nieuwe literatuur over het Caribische gebied (review essay: Kiple, Biological History, and Sheridan, Doctors and Slaves, inter alia),” Tijdschrift voor geschiedenis, 100, 1 (1987), pp. 47-53. 4452. Fleischmann, Ulrich. “‘Marronnage’ in Caribbean Literature” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of ErlangenNürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 4453. Fraser, Peter D. “Slavery in the Caribbean,” in Christopher Abel and Michael Twaddle, eds., Caribbean Societies (London: Institute of Commonwealth Studies, 1985), vol. 2, pp. 21-32. (Collected Seminar Papers, no. 34) 4454. Gaspar, D. Barry. “A Dangerous Spirit of Liberty: Slave Rebellion in the West Indies during the 1730s,” Cimarrons, 1 (1981), pp. 79-91. 4455. Goodman, Mark J. “European Domination and the Foundations of Caribbean Resistance: Social and Cultural Struggle and the Emergent Peasantry in the Slave Plantation Economy” (Paper presented to “Born out of Resistance,” International and Interdisciplinary Congress on Caribbean Cultural Creativity as a Response to European Expansion, 23-28 March 1992, Center for Caribbean and Latin American Studies, Utrecht University). 4456. Goveia, Elsa V. “Influence of Religion in the West Indies,” Americas, 14, 4 (1958), pp. 510-16. Reprinted in History of Religion in the New World (Conference on the History of Religion in the New World During Colonial Times, Washington, 1958), pp. 174-80. 4457. Goveia, Elsa V. “The West Indian Slave Laws of the Eighteenth Century,” Revista de ciencias sociales, 4, 1 (1960), pp. 75-106. Reprinted in Foner and Genovese, eds., Slavery in the New World, pp. 113-37. 4458. Green, William A. “Caribbean Historiography, 1600-1900: The Recent Tide,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 7, 3 (1976-77), pp. 509-30. 4459. Groot, Sylvia W. de. “A Comparison between the History of Maroon Communities in Surinam and Jamaica: an Introduction,” OSO (Tijdschrift voor Surinaamse Taalkunde, Letterkunde en Geschiedenis), 3, 1 (1984), pp. 73-82. Reprinted in Slavery and Abolition, 6, 3 (1985), pp. 173-84. 4460. Groot, Silvia W. de. “The Boni Maroon War 1765-1793, Surinam and French Guyana,” Boletín de estudios latinoamericanos y del Caribe (Amsterdam), 18 (1975), pp. 30-48. 313 Selection reprinted in Delson, ed., Readings in Caribbean History and Economics, pp. 7783. 4461. Groot, Silvia W. de. “Introductie tot een vergelijking tussen Marrongemeenschappen in Suriname en op Jamaica -Introduction to a Comparison Between the History of Maroon Communities in Suriname and Jamaica,” Mededelingen Stichting Surinaams Museum (Paramaribo), nos. 25-26 (1978), pp. 3-21. 4462. Guerra Cedeño, Franklin. Esclavos negros, cimarroneras y cumbes de Barlavento. Caracas: Departamento de Relaciones Publicas de Lagoven, 1984. 4463. Hancock, Ian F. “The Fate of Gypsy Slaves in the West Indies” (Mimeographed, Trinidad, 1979). 4464. Hart, Richard. Slaves Who Abolished Slavery: Vol. I, Blacks in Bondage. Kingston, Jamaica: Institute of Social and Economic Research, University of the West Indies, 1980. 4465. 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Kiple, Kenneth F. “Cholera and Race in the Caribbean,” Journal of Latin American Studies, 17, 1 (1985), pp. 157-77. 4473. Kiple, Kenneth F. “Dimensión epidemiológica de la esclavitud negra en el Caribe,” in La influencia de España en el Caribe, la Florida y la Luisiana, 1500-1800 (Reunión, Universidade Hispanoamericana de Santa María la Rábida, Sept. 1981) (Madrid: Instituto de Cooperación Iberoamericana, 1983), pp. 129-42. 4474. Kiple, Kenneth F., and Virginia H. Kiple. “Deficiency Diseases in the Caribbean,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 11, 2 (1980), pp. 197-216. 4475. Lara, Oruno D. “La place de Simon Bolivar dans le procès de destruction du système esclavagiste aux Caraïbes,” Cahiers des amériques latines, nos. 29-30 (1984), pp. 21340. 4476. Lichtenauer, W. F. “Zijlicht op de slavernij in Suriname en Guyana,” Spiegel historiael, 17, 1 (1982), pp. 22-29. 314 4477. 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Wright, P. “War and Peace with the Maroons, 1730-1739,” Caribbean Quarterly, 16, 1 (1970), pp. 5-27. 3. Spanish 4893. Abad, Diana. “La estructura socioeconómica y demográfica colonial al iniciarse la década de 1860: aspectos fundamentales,” in (Rodríguez, ed.) Temas acerca de la esclavitud, pp. 117-44. 4894. “L’abolició de l’esclavitud a Cuba,” L’Avenç (Barcelona), no. 101, 2 (1987). Special issue. For contents see Barcia, Maluquer de Motes (2), Maurya, and Zanetti Lecuono. 4895. “Acta del Ayuntamiento de la Habana: sobre manumisión de esclavos (Archivos Cubanos),” Revista bimestre cubana, 7 (1912), pp. 474-78. 4896. *Aguirre, Sergio. “Hubo Conspiración de la Escalera?” Gaceta del Caribe, 1 (March, 1944), pp. 12-13. 4897. Aimes, Hubert H. S. A History of Slavery in Cuba, 1511 to 1868. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1907. 4898. *Aizy, Christian. “La condition socio-politique du noir à Hispaniola aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles” (Thèse d’état, Université de Paris X, n.d.). 4899. 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Baralt, Guillermo Antonio. “Slave Conspiracies and Uprisings in Puerto Rico, 1796-1848” (PhD diss., University of Chicago, 1977). 343 Translated as Esclavos rebeldes: conspiraciones y sublevaciones de esclavos en Puerto Rico (17951873) (Río Piedras: Ediciones Huracán, 1982). 4922. Barcía, María del Carmen. “La esclavitud en las plantaciones: una relación secundaria,” in (Rodríguez, ed.) Temas acerca de la esclavitud, pp. 96-116. 4923. Barcía, María del Carmen. “La ley de vientres libres y los intereses esclavistas,” Santiago (Revista de la Universidad de Oriente), 59 (1985), pp. 127-36. 4924. Barcía [Zequera], María del Carmen. “Tactica y estrategia de la burguesia esclavista de Cuba ante la abolición de la esclavitud,” Anuario de estudíos americanos, 43 (1986), pp. 111-26. 4925. Barnet, Miguel. “Biografía de un cimarrón,” Etnología y folklore (Havana), 1 (1966), pp. 65-83. 4926. 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Brass, Tom. “Free and Unfree Rural Labour in Puerto Rico during the Nineteenth Century (review essay: Scarano, Sugar and Slavery in Puerto Rico, and Bergad, Coffee and Growth of Agrarian Capitalism),” Journal of Latin American Studies, 18, 1 (1986), pp. 181-94. 344 4936. Bremer, Thomas. “The Slave as Poet: Comments on the Work and Autobiography of the Cuban Slave Juan Francisco Manzano” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 4937. Bueno, Salvador. “Esclavitud y relaciones interraciales en Cecilia Valdés,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí (Havana), año 77, 28, 1 (1986), pp. 43-67. 4938. Bueno, Salvador. “La narrativa antiesclavista en Cuba de 1835 a 1839,” Cuadernos hispanoamericanos, 451-52 (1988), pp. 169-86. 4939. *Caballero y Rodríguez de la Barrera, José Agustín. “De la consideración sobre la esclavitud en este País: informe a la Sociedad Patriótica, 24 de nov. de 1798,” Escritos Varios (Havana: Editorial de la Universidad de la Habana, 1956), vol. 1, pp. 148-52. 4940. *Caballero y Rodríguez de la Barrera, José Agustín. “Matrimonios entre esclavos: posterior al 7 de abril de 1796,” Escritos Varios (Havana: Editorial de la Universidad de la Habana, 1956), vol. 2, pp. 3-10. 4941. Cabrero Fernández, Leoncio. “La abolición de la esclavitud en Puerto Rico,” in Francisco de Solano, coord., Estudios sobre la abolición de la esclavitud (Anexos de Revista de Indias, 2) (Madrid: Centro de Estudios Históricos, Departamento de Historia de América, 1986), pp. 181-216. 4942. Cabrero Fernández, Leoncio. “La integración de los libertos puertorriqueños en la comunidad ciudadana,” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 293-317. 4943. *Cáceres, Antonio. De la esclavitud a la República. Havana, 1950. 4944. Cantos, Angel López. “Notas para el estudio de la esclavitud en Puerto Rico,” Revista del Instituto de cultura puertorriqueña, 16 (no. 61) (1973), pp. 20-26. 4945. Carbonell, Walterio. “Plácido, conspirador?” Revolución y cultura, 2 (1987), pp. 5357. 4946. Cardoso, Onelio Jorge. “La conversación de un hombre de 106 años,” Bohemia, 58, 37 (1966), p. 33. 4947. Caro Costas, Cirda R. “La real cédula de 1788 y dos reglamentos antillanos sobre la educación, trato y ocupación de los esclavos,” La Torre, 21, 81-82 (1973), pp. 103-30. 4948. Carpentier, Alejo. “Busca e indagación del tiempo ido,” Bohemia, 58, 37 (1966), p. 33. 4949. Carreras, Julio Ángel. “El abolicionismo fue una inquietud social de los esclavos,” Islas (Revista de la Universidad Central de Las Villas Santa Clara, Cuba), no. 48 (1974), pp. 171-84. 4950. Carreras, Julio Ángel. Esclavitud, abolición y racismo. Havana: Ciencias Sociales, 1985. 4951. Carrión, Arturo Morales. “Ojeada a las corrientes abolicionistas en Puerto Rico,” Anuario de estudíos americanos, 43 (1986), pp. 295-309. 345 4952. Cayuela Fernández, José Gregorio. “Los capitanes generales ante la cuestión de la abolición (1854-1863),” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 41553. 4953. “Centenario de la abolición de la esclavitud,” special issue of the Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 22, 3 (1980). For contents see Agüero, Barcia, Franco, García, Gárciga García, Iglésias, López Valdés, Losada and Mayor, Peraza, Pichardo, and Riverend. 4954. Cepero Bonilla, Raúl. Azúcar y abolición: Apuntos para una historia crítica del abolicionismo. Havana: Instituto Cubano del Libre, Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1948. 4955. Cepero Bonilla, Raúl. Obras históricas. Havana: Instituto de historia, 1963. 4956. *”Constitución de un cabildo carabalí en 1814,” Archivos de Folklore Cubano, 1 (1924), pp. 281-83. 4957. Corbitt, Duvon C. “Los colonos yucatecos,” Revista Bimestre Cubana, 39, 1 (1937), pp. 64-99. 4958. Corbitt, Duvon C. “Immigration in Cuba,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 22, 2 (1942), pp. 280-308. 4959. Corwin, Arthur F. Spain and the Abolition of Slavery in Cuba, 1817-1886. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1967. 4960. Cortés Alonso, Vicenta. “La liberación del esclavo,” Anuario de estudios americanos, 22 (1965), pp. 533-68. 4961. Cosculluela, Juan Antonio. “Cuatro años en la Ciénaga de Zapata: epoca de esclavitud,” Revista de arqueología y etnología (Havana), año 6, epoca 2 (no. 12) (1951), pp. 8286. 4962. 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Curet, José A. “De la esclavitud a la abolición: transiciones económicas en las haciendas azucareras de Ponce, 1845-1873,” in Ramos Mattei, ed., Azucar y esclavitud, pp. 59-86. With commentary by Guillermo A. Baralt, pp. 87-90. 346 4968. Curet, José A. “From Slave to Liberto: A Study on Slavery and its Abolition in Puerto Rico, 1840-1880” (PhD diss., Columbia University, 1980). 4969. Dalton, Margarita. “Los depósitos de cimarrones en el siglo XIX,” Etnología y folklore (Havana), 3 (1967), pp. 5-29. 4970. Danger Roll, Zoila. Los cimarrones de El Frijol. Santiago de Cuba: Editorial Oriente, 1977. 4971. Davila, Arturo V. “Aspectos de una pastoral de esclavitud en Puerto Rico durante el siglo diecinueve: 1803-1873,” La Torre, 21, 81-82 (1973), pp. 39-102. 4972. Davila, Arturo V. “Don Jerónimo Mariano Usera y Alarcón, Dean de Puerto Rico - 1853-1863 - en la crisis del sistema esclavista,” La Torre, 21, 81-82 (1973), pp. 13173. 4973. 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El negro en la economía habanera del siglo XIX. Havana: Union de Escritores y Artistas de Cuba, 1971. 4980. Deschamps Chapeaux, Pedro. “Etnias africanas en las sublevaciones de los esclavos en Cuba,” Revista cubana de ciencias sociales, 4 (no. 10) (1986), pp. 14-30. 4981. *Deschamps Chapeaux, Pedro. “Los lucumís de Xifré,” Gaceta de Cuba, 146 (1976), pp. 14-16. 4982. *Deschamps Chapeaux, Pedro. “Motín en el Palacio de Aldama,” Gaceta de Cuba, 166 (1978), pp. 16-17. 4983. *Deschamps Chapeaux, Pedro. “Rebelión lucumí en el cafetal La Juanita,” Gaceta de Cuba, 153 (1977), pp. 18-19. 4984. *Deschamps Chapeaux, Pedro. “Sublevación gangá en Trinidad,” Gaceta de Cuba, 179 (1979), pp. 5-6. 347 4985. Deschamps Chapeaux, Pedro, and Juan Pérez de la Riva. Contribución a la historia de la gente sin historia. Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1974. 4986. *Deschamps Chapeaux, Pedro, and Juan Pérez de la Riva. Una protesta de los negros lucumíes. Havana: Instituto de Etnología y Folklore, Adademia de Ciencias de Cuba, 1966. (Comunicaciones, Centro de estudios africanistas, ser. 2, no. 1.) 4987. “Diálogo con Miguel Barnet, autor de ‘Biografía de un cimarrón’,” Bohemia, 58, 37 (1966), p. 34. 4988. Díaz Soler, Luis M. “The Abolition of Slavery in Puerto Rico, 1868-1873,” Caribbean Historical Review, 2 (1951), pp. 1-25. 4989. Díaz Soler, Luis M. “La experiencia abolicionista de Puerto Rico,” La Torre, 21, 81-82 (1973), pp. 293-305. 4990. Díaz Soler, Luis M. Historia de la esclavitud negra en Puerto Rico. Madrid: Revista de Occidente, 1953. Revised edition, Río Piedras: Editorial Universitaria, 1965. 4991. Domínguez González, Lourdes S. “Las fuentes arqueológicas en el estudio de la esclavitud, Cuba,” Revista cubana de ciencias sociales, año 4, no. 10 (1986), pp. 40-51. 4992. Domínguez [González], Lourdes S. “Fuentes arqueológicas en el estudio de la esclavitud en Cuba,” in La esclavitud en Cuba (Havana: Instituto de Ciencias Históricas, Academia de Ciencias de Cuba, 1986), pp. 267ff. 4993. Duarte Hurtado, Martín. “La abolición de la esclavitud y las discusiones en torno a la repercusión de este hecho en la oferta de fuerza de trabajo,” Santiago (Havana), no. 61 (1986), pp. 133-54. 4994. Duharte J[iménez], Rafael. “Esclavitud, resistencia e identidad,” Anales del Caribe (Havana, Centro de estudios del Caribe), 9 (1989), pp. 229-36. 4995. Duharte Jiménez, Rafael. “La abolición de la esclavitud en Cuba: cronologia comentada (1533-1886),” Del Caribe (Santiago de Cuba), 4, 8 (1987), pp. 114-22. 4996. *Duharte Jiménez, Rafael. “La extinción de los mecanismos de manumisión y coartación en el siglo XIX,” in Seis ensayos de interpretación histórica (Santiago de Cuba: Editorial Oriente, 1983), pp. 78-82. 4997. 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Estrade, Paul. “El abolicionismo radical de Ramon E. Betances,” Anuario de estudíos americanos, 43 (1986), pp. 275-94. 5008. Fall, Ndeye Anna. “Le thème de la sexualité dans le Code Noir: la sexualité interraciale du XVIIe siècle à nos jours à Cuba” (Colloque international pour le tricentenaire du Code Noir, Dakar, 21-26 July 1986). 5009. Fernández Canales, Consuelo. “Exposiciones de la opinión pública ante la abolición de la esclavitud en Puerto Rico (1868-1873),” Cuadernos de historia moderna y contemporánea (Madrid), 8 (1987), pp. 157-71. Reprinted in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 279-91. 5010. Fernández Méndez, Eugenio. Las encomiendas y esclavitud de los indios de Puerto Rico, 1508-1510. Río Piedras: Editorial Universitaria, 1976. 5011. Fernández Méndez, Eugenio. “Las encomiendas y esclavitud de los Indios en Puerto Rico, 1508-1550,” Anuario de estudios americanos, 23 (1966), pp. 337-443. 5012. Fernández Robaina, Tomás F., comp. Bibliografía sobre estudios afro-americanos. Havana: Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 1968. 5013. Flinter, Jorge. “La esclavitud negra en Puerto Rico hacia 1830,” Revista del Instituto de cultura puertorriqueña, 16 (no. 61) (1973), pp. 8-17. 5014. Fontana, Josep. “El problema de los ‘emancipados’ cubanos ante el consejo de estado español (1828),” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 17, 2 (1975), pp. 89-98. 5015. Franco, José Luciano. Afroamérica. Havana: Junta Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología, 1961. Individual essays also listed. 5016. Franco, José Luciano. “Afroamérica,” in Afroamérica (Havana: Publicaciones de la Junta Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología, 1961), pp. 179-204. Reprinted in Diaspora africana en el nuevo mundo, pp. 117-47. 5017. Franco, José Luciano. “Africanos y sus descendientes criollos en las luchas liberadoras, 1533-1895,” Casa de las Américas, 16 (no. 93) (1975), pp. 12-21. 349 5018. Franco, José Luciano. “Antecendentes de las relaciones entre los pueblos de Guinea y Cuba,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 67, 3ra. época, 18, 2 (1976), pp. 510. 5019. Franco, José Luciano. “Cimarrones en las Antillas y América continental,” in Palenques de los negros cimarrones, pp. 17-48. Reprinted in Diaspora africana en el nuevo mundo, pp. 283-323. 5020. Franco, José Luciano. “Los cimarrones en el Caribe,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 22, 3 (1980), pp. 7-20. 5021. Franco, José Luciano. “El cimarrón en las leyes de Indias,” in Palenques de los negros cimarrones, pp. 7-16. Reprinted in Diaspora africana en el nuevo mundo, pp. 269-81. 5022. Franco, José Luciano. “Los cobreros y los palenques de negros cimarrones,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 15, 1 (1973), pp. 37-46. 5023. Franco, José Luciano. “La conjura de los negreros,” in idem, Ensayos historicos (Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1974), pp. 191-200. 5024. Franco, José Luciano. La conspiración de Aponte. Havana: Archivo Nacional, 1963. Reprinted in idem, Ensayos historicos (Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1974), pp. 125-90. 5025. *Franco, José Luciano. “La conspiración de Morales,” in Santiago (Revista de la Universidad de Oriente), 6 (1972), pp. 128-33. Reprinted in idem, Ensayos historicos (Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1974), pp. 93-100. 5026. Franco, José Luciano. “Cuatro siglos de lucha por la libertad: los palenques,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 9, 1 (1967), pp. 5-44. 5027. Franco, José Luciano. Ensayos históricos. Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1974. 5028. Franco, José Luciano. Ensayos sobre el caribe. Havana: Información Científica y Técnica, Universidad de la Habana, 1975. 5029. Franco, José Luciano. “Esclavitud y trata negrera,” in Afroamérica (Havana: Publicaciones de la Junta Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología, 1961), pp. 69-114. Reprinted in Diaspora africana en el nuevo mundo, pp. 63-116. 5030. Franco [Ferrán], José Luciano. “Esquema histórico sobre la trata negrera y la esclavitud,” in La esclavitud en Cuba (Havana: Instituto de Ciencias Históricas, Academia de Ciencias de Cuba, 1986), pp. 1-10. 5031. Franco, José Luciano. La gesta heroica del Triunvirato. Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1978. 5032. *Franco, José Luciano. “Introducción al proceso de la Escalera,” Boletín del Archivo Nacional, 67 (1974), pp. 54-63. 350 5033. Franco, José Luciano. “Maroons and Slave Rebellions in the Spanish Territories,” in Price, ed., Maroon Societies, pp. 35-48. (Selected pages from Afroamérica) 5034. Franco, José Luciano. Las minas de Santiago del Prado y la rebelión de los cobreros, 15301800. Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1975. 5035. Franco, José Luciano. “El negro en la lucha por la independencia de América,” in Diaspora africana en el nuevo mundo, pp. 409-25. 5036. Franco, José Luciano. Los palenques de los negros cimarrones. Havana: Departamento de Orientación Revolucionaria del Comité Central del Partido Comunista de Cuba, 1973. 5037. *Franco, José Luciano. “Palenques del Frijol, Bumba y Maluala,” in Plácido: una polémica que tiene cien años y outros ensayos (Havana: Ediciones Unión, 1964), pp. 27-41. 5038. Franco, José Luciano. “Los palenques en Cuba,” in Palenques de los negros cimarrones, pp. 49-77. Reprinted in Diaspora africana en el nuevo mundo, pp. 325-57. 5039. Franco, José Luciano. “Los palenques en el siglo XIX,” in Palenques de los negros cimarrones, pp. 78-116. Reprinted in Diaspora africana en el nuevo mundo, pp. 359-457. 5040. *Franco, José Luciano. “Las rebeldías negras,” in idem, Tres ensayos (Havana: Ayon, 1951), pp. 87-108. 5041. Franco, José Luciano. Rebeldías negras en los siglos XVIII y XIX. Havana: CICT, Universidad de la Habana, 1975. 5042. Franco, José Luciano, ed. Las conspiraciones de 1810 y 1812. Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1977. 5043. Friol, Robert. “Máximo Gómez y la esclavitud,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí (Havana), año 77, 28, 3 (1986), pp. 5-21. 5044. Fuente García, Alejandro de la. “A alforria de escravos em Havana, 1601-1610: primeiras conclusões,” Estudos econômicos, 20, 1 (1990), pp. 139-59. 5045. Fuente García, Alejandro de la. “Los matrimonios de esclavos en La Habana, 1585-1645,” Ibero-Amerikanisches Archiv, 16, 4 (1990), pp. 507-28. 5046. García Agüero, Salvador. “El negro en nuestra cultura,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 22, 3 (1980), pp. 173-78. 5047. García, Ángel, and Piotr Mironchuk. “La esclavitud en Cuba vista por los viajeros rusos,” in La esclavitud en Cuba (Havana: Instituto de Ciencias Históricas, Academia de Ciencias de Cuba, 1986), pp. 149-61. 5048. García-Gallo, Concepción. “Sobre el ordenamiento jurídico de la esclavitud en las Indias españolas,” Anuario de historia del derecho español, 50 (1980), pp. 1005-38. 5049. *García Rodríguez, Gloria. “Esclavos africanos en La Habana del siglo XVI,” Granma, (June 7, 1982), p. 2. 5050. *García Rodríguez, Gloria. “La importación de esclavos en La Habana, 17631799,” Granma, (February 19-21, 1985), p. 2. 351 5051. García Santana, Alicia. “Rebeldia esclava en Trinidad, 1798,” Islas (Revista de la Universidad Central de Las Villas Santa Clara, Cuba), nos. 52-53 (1975-76), pp. 125-33. 5052. Gárciga, Orestes. “Fuentes utilizadas por José Antonio Saco en la Historia de la esclavitud en las Antillas francesas,” in La esclavitud en Cuba (Havana: Instituto de Ciencias Históricas, Academia de Ciencias de Cuba, 1986), pp. 162-89. 5053. Gárciga, Orestes. “La cuantificación: método de estudio de José Antonio Saco,” in (Rodríguez, ed.) Temas acerca de la esclavitud, pp. 167-84. 5054. Gárciga, Orestes. “La interpretación del hecho histórico a la luz de la Historia de la esclavitud, de José Antonio Saco,” Revista cubana de ciencias sociales, año 4, no. 10 (1986), pp. 31-39. 5055. Gárciga [García], Orestes. “Una obra inédita de José Antonio Saco?” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 22, 3 (1980), pp. 145-54. 5056. González del Valle, Francisco. “Luz, Saco, y Del Monte ante la esclavitud negra: cinco cartas inéditas de Félix Tancoy Bosmeniel a Domingo del Monte, relativas a la propaganda abolicionista inglesa,” Revista bimestre cubana, 47 (1941), pp. 190-96. 5057. González [Moreno], Mirtha Teresa. “Aproximaciones y diferencias entre los hacendados y el Código Negro español de 1789,” in (Rodríguez, ed.) Temas acerca de la esclavitud, pp. 194-204. 5058. González del Valle [y Ramírez], Francisco. La conspiración de la Escalera: I - José de la Luz y Caballero. Havana: El Siglo XX, 1925. 5059. González Moreno, Mirtha [Teresa]. “Breve estudio de una fuente documental: los libros de registros de entrada y salida del Depósito de Cimarrones de La Habana,” in La esclavitud en Cuba (Havana: Instituto de Ciencias Históricas, Academia de Ciencias de Cuba, 1986), pp. 190-95. 5060. Griñán Peralta, Leonardo. “La defensa de los esclavos,” in idem, Ensayos y conferencias (Santiago de Cuba: Editora del Consejo Nacional de Universidades, 1964), pp. 29-81. 5061. Guerra Diaz, Carmen, et al. “Notas para el estudio de la esclavitud en la antigua region de Villa Clara (Cuba),” Islas (Revista de la Universidad Central de Las Villas Santa Clara, Cuba), 84 (1986), pp. 3-29. 5062. Guerrero Cano, María Magdalena. “Incidencias esclavistas tras la emancipación en Santo Domingo,” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 321-29. 5063. Gunst, Laurie Barbara. “Bartolomé de las Casas and the Question of Negro Slavery in the Early Spanish Indies” (PhD diss., Harvard University, 1982). 5064. Gutiérrez Felix, Euclides. “Las cimarronadas en Santo Domingo,” Del Caribe (Santiago de Cuba), 4, 8 (1987), pp. 11-23. 5065. Guzmán, F. Pérez. “Modo de vida de esclavos y forzados en las fortificaciones de Cuba siglo XVIII,” História (São Paulo), 8 (1989), pp. 55-66. 352 5066. Hall, Gwendolyn Midlo. “Raza y libertad: la manumisión de los esclavos rurales de Luisiana bajo la jurisdicción del capitán general de Cuba,” Anuario de estudíos americanos, 43 (1986), pp. 365-76. 5067. Hall, Gwendolyn M[idlo]. “Slavery and Nationality in Louisiana under Spanish Rule” (Paper presented to 19th Annual Conference of Caribbean Historians, Martinique, April 1987). 5068. Hall, Gwendolyn M[idlo]. “The Slave’s Life in Cuba,” in Delson, ed., Readings in Caribbean History and Economics, pp. 98-101. (From Social Control in Slave Plantation Societies, pp. 16-19) 5069. Hell, Jürgen. “Essay über die Entwicklung der Plantagenwirtschaft auf der Insel Kuba (1800 bis 1898),” Jahrbüch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1 (1971), pp. 273-89. 5070. Hernández Ruigómez, Almudena. “La abolición de la esclavitud en Puerto Rico: Introducción al estudio de la mentalidades anti-esclavistas,” Quinto centenario, 14 (1988), pp. 27-47. 5071. Hernández Sandoica, Elena. “Estudios españoles recientes acerca de la trata y la abolición de la esclavitud en Cuba: aproximación crítica y perspectivas,” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 515-27. 5072. Hernández y Sánchez-Barbara, Mario. “David Turnbull y el problema de la esclavitud en Cuba,” Anuario de estudios americanos, 14 (1957), pp. 241-99. 5073. Holmes, Jack D. L. “The Role of Blacks in Spanish Alabama: The Mobile District, 1780-1813,” Alabama Historical Quarterly, 37, 1 (1975), pp. 5-18. 5074. Ibarra, Jorge. “Crisis de la esclavitud patriarcal cubana,” Anuario de estudíos americanos, 43 (1986), pp. 391-417. 5075. Ibarra, Jorge. “Regionalismo y esclavitud patriarcal en los Departamentos Oriental y Central de Cuba,” Estudios de historia social, 44-47 (1988), pp. 115-36. 5076. Iduate, Juan. “Noticias sobre sublevaciones y conspiraciones de esclavos: Cafetal Salvador, 1833,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 24, 1-2 (1982), pp. 117-53. 5077. Iglesias García, Fe. “Algunas consideraciones en torno a la abolición de la esclavitud,” in La esclavitud en Cuba (Havana: Instituto de Ciencias Históricas, Academia de Ciencias de Cuba, 1986), pp. 59-85. 5078. Iglesias [García], Fe. “Azúcar, esclavitud y tecnologia (segunda mitad del siglo XIX),” Santiago (Revista de la Universidad de Oriente), 61 (1986), pp. 113-32. 5079. Iglésias [García], Fe. “Características de la población cubana en 1862,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 22, 3 (1980), pp. 89-110. 5080. Iglesias García, Fe. “Slavery as the Predominant Form of Labor Exploitation in Nineteenth-Century Cuba” (Paper presented to Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, San Francisco, 1983). 5081. *Iglesias Santos, Álvaro de la. La factoría y la trata, 1763. Havana: Avisador Comerical, 1906. 353 5082. Iznaga, Diana. La burguesia esclavista cubana. La Habana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1987. 5083. La institución de la esclavitud y su crisis: 1823-1873. (Vol. l of El proceso abolicionista en Puerto Rico: Documentos para su estudio). San Juan de Puerto Rico: Centro de Investigaciones Históricas, 1974. 5084. Kiple, Kenneth F. Blacks in Colonial Cuba, 1774-1899. Gainesville: University Presses of Florida, 1976. 5085. Kiple, Kenneth F. “Summary, Overview and Questions: Excerpt from Blacks in Colonial Cuba, 1774-1899,” Caribbean Quarterly, 22, 2-3 (1976), pp. 59-61. 5086. Klein, Herbert S. “Consideraciones sobre de la viabilidad de la esclavitud y las causas de la abolición en la Cuba del siglo diecinueve,” La Torre, 21, 81-82 (1973), pp. 30718. 5087. Knight, Franklin W. “Cuba,” in Cohen and Greene, eds., Neither Slave nor Free, pp. 278-308. 5088. Knight, Franklin W. “Economy and Society in Cuba during the Eighteenth Century” (Paper presented to 19th Annual Conference of Caribbean Historians, Martinique, April 1987). 5089. Knight, Franklin W. “From Free Labor to Slavery: The Case of Cuba, 15111760” (Paper presented to conference on “Cultivation and Culture: Labor and the Shaping of Slave Life in the Americas”, University of Maryland, 12-14 April 1989). 5090. Knight, Franklin W. Slave Society in Cuba during the Nineteenth Century. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1970. 5091. Knight, Franklin W. “Slavery, Race, and Social Structure in Cuba During the Nineteenth Century,” in Toplin, ed., Slavery and Race Relations in Latin America, pp. 204-27. 5092. Knight, Franklin W. “The Social Structure of Cuban Slave Society in the Nineteenth Century,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 259-66. 5093. König, Hans-Joachim. “The código negrero of 1789 and its Reverberations” (Paper presented to the International Conference on “Slavery in the Americas”, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, 9-12 November 1989). 5094. Labarre, Roland. “La conspiración de 1844: un ‘complot por lo menos dudoso’ y una ‘atroz maquinación’,” Anuario de estudíos americanos, 43 (1986), pp. 127-41. 5095. Lachatañere, Rómulo. “El sistema religioso de los lucumíes y otras influencias africanas en Cuba,” Estudios afrocubanos, 3, 1-4 (1939), pp. 28-84; 4, 1-4 (1940), pp. 27-38. 5096. Lachatañere, Rómulo. “Notas sobre la formación de la población afro-cubana,” Actas del folklore (Havana), l, 4 (1961), pp. 3-11. 5097. Lachatañere, Rómulo. “Tipos étnicos africanos que concurrieron en la amalgama cubana,” Actas del folklore (Havana), 1, 3 (1961), pp. 5-12. 5098. Lainer, Clemente. “Cuba et la conspiration d’Aponte en 1812,” Revue de la Société haïtienne d’histoire, de géographie et de géologie, 23 (no. 86) (1952), pp. 19-30. 354 5099. Lamore, Jean. “Cecilia Valdés: realidades económicas y comportamientos sociales en la Cuba esclavista de 1830,” Casa de las Américas, 19, 110 (1978), pp. 41-53. 5100. Langley, Lester D. “Slavery, Reform, and American Policy in Cuba, 1823-1878,” Revista de historia de América, 65-66 (1968), pp. 71-84. 5101. Larrazábel Blanco, Carlos. Los negros y la esclavitud en Santo Domingo (Colección Pensamiento Dominicano). Santo Domingo: Julio de Postigo, 1967. 5102. Leante, César. “Cecilia Valdés, espejo de la esclavitud,” Casa de las Américas, 15, 89 (1975), pp. 19-25. 5103. Levine, Edwin A. “The Seed of Slavery in the New World: An Examination of the Factors Leading to the Impressment of Indian Labor in Hispaniola,” Revista de historia de América, no. 60 (1965), pp. 1-68. 5104. Lewis Galanes, Adriana. “El manuscrito Poesias de J. F. Manzano, esclavo en la isla de Cuba,” Anales del Caribe (Havana, Centro de estudios del Caribe), 9 (1989), pp. 19-72. 5105. Llanes Miqueli, Rita. Las victimas del año del cuero. Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1984. 5106. López Segrera, Francisco. “Cuba: Dependence, Plantation Economy, and Social Classes, 1762-1902,” in Moreno Fraginals, Moya Pons, and Engerman, eds., Between Slavery and Free Labor, pp. 77-93. 5107. López Valdés, Rafael. “Hacia una periodización de la historia de la esclavitud en Cuba,” in La esclavitud en Cuba (Havana: Instituto de Ciencias Históricas, Academia de Ciencias de Cuba, 1986), pp. 11-41. 5108. López Valdés, Rafael. “Pertenencia étnica de los esclavos de Tiguabos (Guantánamo) entre los años 1789 y 1844,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí (Havana), año 77, 28, 3 (1986), pp. 23-63. 5109. López Valdés, Rafael. “Una muestra de la composición étnica y particularidad en su desarrollo colonial,” Revista cubana de ciencias sociales, año 6, no. 17 (1988), pp. 134-61. 5110. Luis, William. Literary Bondage: Slavery in Cuban Narrative. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1990. 5111. López Valdés, Rafael. “Problemas del estudio de los componentes africanos en la historia étnica de Cuba,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 22, 3 (1980), pp. 155-72. 5112. Malagón Barceló, Javier. “Un documento del siglo XVIII para la historia de la esclavitud en las Antillas,” in Miscelánea de estudios dedicados a Fernando Ortiz (Havana: Sociedad Económica de Amigos del Pais, 1955), vol. 2, pp. 951-68. Also in Imago Mundi (Buenos Aires), 9 (1955), pp. 38-56. 5113. Maluquer de Motes, Jordi. “Abolicionisme i esclavisme a Espanya,” L’Avenç (Barcelona), no. 101, 2 (1987), pp. 38-45. 5114. Maluquer de Motes, Jordi. “Abolicionismo y resistencia a la abolición en la España del siglo XIX,” Anuario de estudíos americanos, 43 (1986), pp. 311-31. 355 5115. Maluquer de Motes, Jordi. “La burguesía catalana y la esclavitud en Cuba: política y producción,” Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional José Martí, 18, 2 (año 67) (1976), pp. 11-81. 5116. Maluquer de Motes, Jordi. “Conversa: Julio le Riverènd: Cuba, laboratori del sistema esclavista,” L’Avenç (Barcelona), no. 101, 2 (1987), pp. 52-57. 5117. Maluquer de Motes [Bernet], Jordi. “El problema de la esclavitud y la revolución de 1868,” Hispania, 31 (no. 117) (1971), pp. 55-75. 5118. Manzano, Juan Francisco. Autobiografía, cartas y versos. Havana: Municipio de la Habana, 1937. (Cuadernos de historia habanera, no. 8.) With an introduction by José L. Franco. 5119. Martínez-Alier, Verena. Marriage, Class and Colour in Nineteenth-Century Cuba: A Study of Racial Attitudes and Sexual Values in a Slave Society. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1974. 5120. Martínez Vergne, Teresita. “The Allocation of Liberated African Labour Through the Casa de Beneficencia - San Juan, Puerto Rico, 1859-1862,” Slavery and Abolition, 12, 3 (1991), pp. 200-16. 5121. Mascareñas, M. Tona. “La abolición en Puerto Rico: un proceso irremediable,” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 269-78. 5122. Mayo, Manuel García. “Los abolicionistas del siglo XVI,” Revista Bimestre Cubana, 39, 1 (1937), pp. 46-63. 5123. Maurya, Vibha. “José Martí i l’esclavitud,” L’Avenç (Barcelona), no. 101, 2 (1987), pp. 34-37. 5124. Menéndez, Carlos R. Historia del infame y vergonzoso comercio de indios vendidos a los esclavistas de Cuba por los políticos yucatecos desde 1848 hasta 1861. Merida, Yucatán: Talleres Gráficos de “La Revista de Yucatán,” 1923. 5125. Menéndez, Carlos R. Las “Memorias” de Don Buenaventura Vivó y la venta de indios yucatecos en Cuba: segundo apendice a la historia de aquel infame e vergonzoso tráfico, con nuevos y intersantes datos y comentarios. Mérida de Yucatán: Diario de Yucatán, 1925. 5126. Mendez Capote, Renée. 4 conspiraciones. Havana: Instituto Cubano del Libro, 1972. 5127. Mesa Rodríguez, Manuel I. “Luz y Caballero y la esclavitud,” Universidad de la Habana, 172 (1965), pp. 43-61. 5128. Minguet, Charles. “Les ‘lumières’, l’esclavage et les problèmes de l’indépendance dans les Antilles (1810-1820),” in Mélanges à la mémoire de Jean Sarrailh (Paris: Centre de Recherches de l’Institut d’etudes hispaniques, 1966), vol. 2, pp. 177-92. 5129. Mintz, Sidney W. “Cuba: terre et esclaves,” Etudes rurales, 48 (1972), pp. 135-47. 5130. Mintz, Sidney W. “The Role of Forced Labor in Nineteenth-Century Puerto Rico,” Caribbean Historical Review, 2 (1951), pp. 134-41. Revised as “Slavery and Forced Labor in Puerto Rico,” in idem, Caribbean Transformations (Chicago: Aldine, 1974), pp. 82-94. 356 5131. Moliner Castaneda, Israel. “Sublevaciones de esclavos en Cuba,” Del Caribe (Santiago de Cuba), 4, 8 (1987), pp. 108-13. 5132. Montejo, Esteban (ed. Miguel Barnet). Biografía de un cimarrón. Havana: Academia de Ciencias de Cuba, Instituto de Etnología y Folklore, 1966. Translated as The Autobiography of a Runaway Slave (trans. Jocasta Innes) (New York: World Pub., 1968). 5133. Morales Carrión, Arturo. “La abolición de la trata y las corrientes abolicionistas en Puerto Rico,” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 247-68. 5134. Morales Padrón, Francisco. “La vida cotidiana en una hacienda de esclavos,” Revista del Instituto de cultura puertorriqueña, 4 (no. 10) (1961), pp. 23-33. 5135. Moreno Fraginals, Manuel. “Africa in Cuba: A Quantitative Analysis of the African Population in the Island of Cuba,” in Rubin and Tuden, eds., Comparative Perspectives, pp. 187-201. 5136. Moreno Fraginals, Manuel. “La esclavitud: a cien años del fin,” Revolución y cultura (Havana), 8 (1986), pp. 2-11. 5137. *Moreno Fraginals, Manuel. “El mercado de brazos, 1790-1860,” in El ingenio: complejo económico social cubano del azúcar (Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1978), vol. 1, pp. 257-309. 5138. Moreno Fraginals, Manuel. “Peculiaridades de la esclavitud en Cuba,” Del Caribe (Santiago de Cuba), 4, 8 (1987), pp. 4-10. 5139. Moreno Fraginals, Manuel. 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[“1 t., paginación varia”] 5219. *Roig de Leuchsenring, Emilio. “A una centuria de la conspiración de la Escalera y el fusilamiento de Plácido,” Carteles, 23 July 1944, pp. 38-39. 5220. Roig de Leuchsenring, Emilio. “La introducción de los esclavos africanos - Trato que se daba a los negros y horros - Vida, costumbres y actividades de unos y otros Disposiciones del Cabildo,” in Actas capitulares del Ayuntamiento de la Habana (Havana: Municipio de la Habana, 1937), vol. 1, pp. 113-19. 5221. Rojas, María Teresa de. “Algunos datos sobre los negros esclavos y horros en la Habana del siglo XVI,” in Miscelánea de estudios dedicados a Fernando Ortiz (Havana, 1956), vol. 2, pp. 1275-87. 5222. Roldán de Montaud, Inés. “Los partidos políticos y la polémica abolicionista tras la paz del Zanjón,” in Solano and Guimerá, eds., Esclavitud y derechos humanos, pp. 499-513. 5223. Roller, Arnold. “El marfil negro y el oro blanco en Cuba,” Revista bimestre cubana, 25 (1930), pp. 281-86. 5224. 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Debien, Gabriel. “Les colons des Antilles et leur main-d’oeuvre à la fin du XVIIIe siècle,” Annales historiques de la révolution française, 27 (1955), pp. 259-83. *Reprinted as “Sur les grandes plantations de Saint-Domingue aux dernières années du XVIIIe siècle,” Annales des Antilles, 1-2 (1956), pp. 9-32. 5383. Debien, Gabriel. “Comptes, profits, esclaves et travaux de deux sucreries de Saint-Domingue (1774-1798),” Revue de la Société haïtienne d’histoire et de géographie et de géologie, 15 (no. 55) (1944), pp. 1-60; 16 (no. 56) (1945), pp. 1-51. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 6) 5384. Debien, Gabriel. “La crainte des assemblées d’esclaves à Port-au-Prince au lendemain des tremblements de terre de 1770,” Conjonction (Port-au-Prince), 144 (1979), pp. 52-60. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 199) 5385. Debien, Gabriel. “De l’Afrique à Saint Domingue,” Revue de la Société haitienne d’histoire et de géographie et de géologie, no. 135 (1982), pp. 7-75. 5386. Debien, Gabriel. “De quelques problèmes humains sur les plantations de SaintDomingue à la veille de la Révolution (1780-1791),” in Symposium intercolonial (Bordeaux, June 1952) (Bordeaux: Delmas, 1954), pp. 178-93. 5387. Debien, Gabriel. “Destinées d’esclaves à la Martinique,” Bulletin de l’Institut française d’Afrique noire, sér. B, 22, 1-2 (1960), pp. 1-91. 5388. Debien, Gabriel. “Les esclaves,” in Pierre Pluchon, ed., Histoire des Antilles et de la Guyane (Toulouse: Privat, 1982), pp. 141-61. 5389. Debien, Gabriel. Les esclaves aux Antilles françaises (XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles). BasseTerre: Société d’histoire de la Guadeloupe, 1974. 5390. Debien, Gabriel. “Les esclaves des plantations Mauger à Saint-Domingue (17631802),” Bulletin de la Sociéte d’histoire de la Guadeloupe, 43-44 (1980), pp. 31-164. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 201) 373 5391. Debien, Gabriel. “Esclaves sur les plantations du XVIIe siècle: Saint-Christophe Saint-Domingue (1660-1685),” Revue de la Société haïtienne d’histoire et de géographie, 42 (no. 143) (1984), pp. 15-40. 5392. Debien, Gabriel. Etudes antillaises; XVIIIe siècle. Paris: Armand Colin, 1956. 5393. Debien, Gabriel. “Le marronage aux Antilles françaises au XVIIIe siècle,” Caribbean Studies, 6, 3 (1966), pp. 3-42. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 105) Translated (with editing) in Price, ed., Maroon Societies, pp. 107-34. 5394. Debien, Gabriel. “Les marrons à Saint-Domingue en 1766,” Jamican Historical Review, 6 (1966), pp. 9-20. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 124) 5395. Debien, Gabriel. “Un nantais à la chasse aux marrons en Guyane (octobredécembre 1808),” Enquêtes et documents (Nantes: Centre de Recherche sur l’Histoire de la France Atlantique), vol. 1 (1971), pp. 163-72. 5396. Debien, Gabriel. “Notes bibliographiques sur le soulèvement des esclaves,” Revue de la Société d’histoire et de géographie d’Haïti, 17 (no. 62) (1946), pp. 41-57. 5397. Debien, Gabriel. “La nourriture des esclaves sur les plantations des Antilles françaises aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles,” Caribbean Studies, 4, 2 (1964), pp. 3-27. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 82) 5398. Debien, Gabriel. “Les origines des esclaves des Antilles,” Bulletin de l’Institut français d’Afrique noire, sér. B, 23, 3-4 (1961), pp. 363-87. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 69) 5399. Debien, Gabriel. “Les origines des esclaves des Antilles (suite),” Bulletin de l’Institut français d’Afrique noire, sér. B, 27, 3-4 (1965), pp. 755-99. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 94) 5400. Debien, Gabriel. “Les origines des esclaves aux Antilles (conclusion),” Bulletin de l’Institut fondamental d’Afrique noire, sér. B, 29, 3-4 (1967), pp. 536-58. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 110) 5401. Debien, Gabriel. Plantations et esclaves à Saint-Domingue: La sucrerie Cottineau (17501777), La sucrerie Foäche à Jean-Rabel et ses esclaves (1770-1803). Dakar: Université de Dakar, 1962. (Publications de la Section d’histoire, no. 3) (Notes d’histoire coloniale, nos. 66, 68) 5402. Debien, Gabriel. “Pour améliorer les cases, les hôpitaux et la nourriture des esclaves à Saint-Domingue à la fin du XVIIIe siècle,” Revue de la Société haitienne d’histoire et de géographie et de géologie, no. 131 (1981), pp. 11-17. 5403. Debien, Gabriel. “La question des vivres pour les esclaves aux Antilles françaises aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles,” Anuario del Instituto de antropología e historia del Estado Carabobo (Caracas), 7-8 (1970-71), pp. 131-73. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 146) 5404. Debien, Gabriel. “Religion des esclaves et réaction des colons à la Martinique en 1802: le curé Robert, Ponce Champroux, prêtre manceau,” La province du Maine, ser. 3, 10 (no. 38) (1970), pp. 233-43. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 127) 5405. Debien, Gabriel. “Sources de l’histoire de l’esclavage aux Antilles,” Revue de la Société haïtienne d’histoire et de géographie et de géologie, 34 (no. 111) (1967), pp. 12-48. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 107) 374 5406. Debien, Gabriel. “Sur les plantations Mauger à l’Artibonite (Saint-Domingue 1763-1803),” Enquêtes et documents (Nantes: Centre de recherche sur l’histoire de la France atlantique), vol. 6 (1981), pp. 219-314. 5407. Debien, Gabriel, and Jean Fouchard. “Aspects de l’esclavage aux Antilles françaises: le petit marronage à Saint-Domingue autour du Cap (1790-1791),” Cahiers des Amériques latines, Série Sciences de l’Homme, no. 3 (1969), pp. 31-67. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 125) 5408. Debien, Gabriel, Jean Fouchard, and Marie Antoinette Ménier. “Toussaint Louverture avant 1789: légendes et réalités,” Conjonction (Port-au-Prince), 134 (1977), pp. 65-80. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 177) 5409. Debien, Gabriel, and Jacques Houdaille. “Les origines des esclaves aux Antilles (suite),” Bulletin de l’Institut français d’Afrique noire, sér. B, 26, 1-2 (1964), pp. 166-211. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 78) 5410. Debien, Gabriel, and Jacques Houdaille. “Les origines africaines des esclaves des Antilles françaises,” Caribbean Studies, 10, 2 (1970), pp. 5-29. 5411. Debien, Gabriel, and Johanna Felhoen Kraal. “Esclaves et plantations de Surinam vus par Malouet, 1777,” West-Indische Gids, 36, 1 (1955), pp. 53-60. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 38) 5412. Debien, Gabriel, and Pierre Pluchon. “L’habitation Fevret et Saint-Mesmin,” Bulletin du Centre d’histoire des espaces atlantiques, 3 (1987), pp. 157-88. 5413. Debien, Gabriel, and Pierre Pluchon. “Trois sucreries de Léogane (SaintDomingue), 1776-1802,” Bulletin du Centre d’histoire des espaces atlantiques, 2 (1985), pp. 71-150. 5414. Debien, Gabriel, and R. Richard. “Les origines des esclaves des Antilles (suite),” Bulletin de l’Institut français d’Afrique noire, sér. B, 25, 1-2 (1963), pp. 1-38. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 71) 5415. Delafosse, Marcel, and Gabriel Debien. “Les origines des esclaves aux Antilles (suite),” Bulletin de l’Institut français d’Afrique noire, sér. B, 1-2 (1965), pp. 319-69. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 88) 5416. Desmangles, Leslie G. “The Maroon Republics and Religious Diversity in Colonial Haiti,” Anthropos, 85, 4-6 (1990), pp. 475-82. 5417. Doriac, Neuville. “Éléments en vue du repérage de l’idéologie médicale au XVIIIe siècle dans l’esclavage des nègres,” in Bruleaux, Calmont, and Mam-Lam-Fouck, coords., Deux siècles d’esclavage en Guyane française 1652-1848, pp. 91-101. 5418. Doriac, Neuville. Esclavage, assimilation et guyanité. Paris: Anthropos, 1985. 5419. *Duchet, Michèle. “Malouet et le problème de l’esclavage,” in Malouet (1740-1814) (Actes du Colloque des 30 novembre et 1er décembre 1989, Riom, 1990), as Revue Auvergne, 104 (1990), pp. 63-70. 5420. Dupuy, Alex. “French Merchant Capital and Slavery in Saint-Domingue,” Latin American Perspectives, 12, 3 (no. 46) (1985), pp. 77-102. 375 5421. *Duval, Christiane. “La condition juridique des hommes de couleur libres à la Martinique au temps de l’esclavage” (Thèse de 3ème cycle, Paris I, 1975). 5422. Elisabeth, Léo. “The French Antilles,” in Cohen and Greene, eds., Neither Slave nor Free, pp. 134-71. 5423. Epstein, David M. “Malouet and the Issue of Slavery in Saint Domingue, 17671802,” Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Western Society for French History (Las Cruces, 1987) (Flagstaff: Northern Arizona University, 1988), vol. 15, pp. 179-87. With comment by Michael Fitzsimmons, pp. 187-89. 5424. Etienne, Eddy V. “Incidences de la Déclaration des Droits de l’Homme et du Citoyen sur la Révolution de Saint-Domingue,” Conjonction (revue franco-haïtienne), no. 181 (1989), pp. 47-59. 5425. Fallope, Josette. “Les affranchissements d’esclaves à la Guadeloupe entre 1815 et 1848,” Annales de l’Université d’Abidjan (Histoire, série I), 6 (1978), pp. 5-32. 5426. Fallope, Josette. “Contribution de Grand Lahou au peuplement afro-caribéen (Guadeloupe-Martinique),” in Daget, ed., De la traite à l’esclavage, vol. 2, pp. 9-24. 5427. Fallope, Josette. “Les esclaves africains à la Guadeloupe en 1848 d’après les registres d’état civil des nouveaux citoyens conservés aux Archives de la Guadeloupe,” Bulletin de la Société d’histoire de la Guadeloupe, nos. 57-58 (1983), pp. 3-25. 5428. Faloppe, Josette. Esclaves et citoyens: les noirs à la Guadeloupe au XIXe dans les processue de résistance et d’intégration. Basse-Terre: Société d’histoire de la Guadeloupe, 1991. 5429. Fallope, Josette. “Les occupations d’esclaves à la Guadeloupe dans la première e moitié du XIX siècle,” Revue française d’histoire d’outre-mer, 74, 2 (no. 275) (1987), pp. 189205. 5430. *Fallope, Josette. “Résistance d’esclaves et ajustement au système: le cas de la Guadeloupe dans la première moitié du XIXe siècle,” Bulletin de la Société d’histoire de la Guadeloupe, nos. 67-68 (1986), pp. 31-52. 5431. Fick, Carolyn E[laine]. “Black Masses in the San Domingo Revolution, 17911803” (PhD diss., Université Concordia de Montréal, 1979). 5432. *Fick, Carolyn E. “The French Revolution in Saint Domingue: Its Triumph and Failure, 1789-1804,” in David Barry Gaspar and David Patrick Geggus, eds., The French and Haitian Revolutions and the Greater Caribbean (forthcoming). 5433. *Fisher-Blanchet, Inez. “La Révolution Française et le processus de destruction du système esclavagiste: points de repères, sources et historiographie” (Colloque, Centre de Recherches Caraïbes-Amériques, Paris, 1989). 5434. Forster, Robert. “A Sugar Plantation on Saint-Domingue in the Eighteenth Century: White Attitudes Towards the Slave Trade,” Historia y sociedad (Puerto Rico), 1 (1988), pp. 9-37. 5435. Foubert, Bernard. “Colons et esclaves du sud de Saint-Domingue au début de la Révolution,” Revue française d’histoire d’outre-mer, 61, 2 (no. 223) (1974), pp. 199-217. 376 5436. Foubert, Bernard. “Une habitation à Saint-Domingue à la veille de la Guerre d’Amérique (1777): la sucrerie Pimelle au Fond des Nègres,” Revue de la Société haitienne d’histoire et de géographie et de géologie, no. 130 (1981), pp. 9-62. 5437. Foubert, Bernard. “L’habitation Lemmens à Saint-Domingue au début de la Révolution,” Revue de la société haïtienne d’histoire et de géographie, 45 (no. 154) (1987), pp. 1-28. 5438. Foubert, Bernard. “Le marronage sur les habitations Laborde à Saint-Domingue dans la seconde moitié du XVIIIe siècle,” Annales de Bretagne et des pays de l’Ouest, 95, 3 (1988), pp. 277-310. 5439. Foubert, Bernard. “La norriture des esclaves et la question des vivres sur une grande habitation sucrière à la fin du XVIIIéme siècle,” Bulletin du Centre d’histoire des espaces atlantiques, 2 (1985), pp. 11-36. 5440. Fouchard, Jean. Les marrons de la liberté. Paris: Editions de l’Ecole, 1972. Translated as The Haitian Maroons: Liberty or Death (trans. A. Faulkner Watts) (New York: Edward W. Blyden Press, 1981). 5441. Fouchard, Jean. Les marrons du syllabaire: quelques aspects du problème de l’instruction et de l’éducation des esclaves et affranchis de Saint-Domingue. Port-au-Prince: Editions Henri Duchamps, 1953. 5442. Fouchard, Jean. “Toussaint-Louverture,” Revue de la Société haïtienne d’histoire et de géographie, 46, 3 (no. 164) (1989), pp. 37-50. 5443. France. Le code noir, ou recueil des réglemens rendus jusqu’à présent concernant le gouvernement, l’administration de la justice, la police, la discipline et le commerce des nègres dans les colonies françaises. Basse-Terre: Société de Guadeloupe/Fort-de-France: Société d’Histoire de la Martinique, 1980. 5444. François-Gaugrin, Annick. “Le contexte pré-abolitionniste et le problème de ses répercussions sur le comportement de l’esclave martiniquais (1845-1848),” Dialogues d’histoire ancienne, 11 (1985), pp. 711-20. 5445. Frisch [-Vavony], Nicole. “Démographie des esclaves de la Guadeloupe à la fin du XVIIIe siècle: créoles et africains” (Unpublished paper presented at the Congrès International de Démographie Historique de Paris, 1987). 5446. *Frisch-Vavony, Nicole. “Les esclaves de la Guadeloupe à la fin de l’Ancien Régime [d’après des sources notariales],(1770-1789)” (Thèse [de 3e cycle] - Histoire, Université de Paris I, 1982). 5447. [Vavony-] Frisch, Nicole. “Les esclaves de la Guadeloupe à la fin de l’Ancien Régime d’après les sources notariales (1770-1789),” Bulletin de la Société de’histoire de la Guadeloupe, 63-64, 1-2 (1985) (numéro spécial). 5448. Frisch [-Vavony], Nicole, and Marc Frisch. “Les esclaves de la Guadeloupe à la fin de l’Ancien Régime: du Code Noir aux codes numériques,” Histoire et mesure, 2, 2 (1987), pp. 93-115. 5449. Gaspar, D[avid] Barry. “Slave Resistance and Survival in the Development of Sunday Markets in Montserrat (1680-1736)” (Paper presented to “Born out of Resistance,” International and Interdisciplinary Congress on Caribbean Cultural Creativity as a 377 Response to European Expansion, 23-28 March 1992, Center for Caribbean and Latin American Studies, Utrecht University). 5450. Gautier, Arlette. “Du sexe des meubles (la femme esclave aux Antilles au XVIIIe siècle,” in Femmes, féminisme et recherches: colloque nationale (Toulouse, 1982) (Toulouse, 1984), pp. 69-75. 5451. Gautier, Arlette. “Les esclaves de l’Habitation Bisdary (1763-1817),” Bulletin de la Société d’histoire de la Guadeloupe, 60, 2 (1984), pp. 13-50. 5452. Gautier, Arlette. “Les esclaves femmes aux Antilles françaises 1635-1848,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, 10, 3 (1983), pp. 409-33. 5453. Gautier, Arlette. “Les familles esclaves aux Antilles Françaises” (Paper presented to 19th Annual Conference of Caribbean Historians, Martinique, April 1987). 5454. Gautier, Arlette. “Les origins ethniques des esclaves déportés à Nippes, SaintDomingue de 1721 à 1770, d’après les archives notariales,” Revue de la Société haïtienne d’histoire et de géographie, 45 (nos. 156-57) (1987), pp. 43-54. With appendices. Reprinted in Canadian Journal of African Studies/Revue canadienne des études africaines, 23, 1 (1989), pp. 28-39. 5455. Gautier, Arlette. Les soeurs de solitude: la condition féminine dans l’esclave aux Antilles du XVIIe au XIXe siècle. Paris: Editions Caribéennes, 1985. 5456. Geggus, David P. “The British Army and the Slave Revolt: Saint Domingue in the 1790s,” History Today, 32, 7 (1982), pp. 35-39. 5457. Geggus, David P. “The British Government and the Saint Domingue Slave Revolt, 1791-1793,” English Historical Review, 96 (no. 379) (1981), pp. 285-305. 5458. Geggus, David P. “Les esclaves de la plaine du Nord à la veille de la Révolution française: les équipes de travail sur une vingtaine de sucreries (parties 1-3),” Revue de la Société haitienne d’histoire et de géographie: Part I, no. 135 (1982), pp. 85-107; Part II, no. 136 (1982), pp. 5-32; Part III, 42 (no. 144) (1984), pp. 8-44; Part IV, no. 149 (1985), pp. 16-51. 5459. Geggus, David P. “From His Most Catholic Majesty to the Godless Republic: The ‘Volte-face’ of Toussaint Louverture and the Ending of Slavery in Saint Domingue,” Revue française d’histoire d’outre-mer, 65, 4 (no. 24l) (1978), pp. 481-99. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 202) *Revised and translated as “A reviravolta de Toussaint Louverture e o fim da escravidão em São Domingos,” Revista de estudos latino-americanos, 1 (1990), forthcoming. 5460. Geggus, David P. “The Haitian Revolution,” in Franklin Knight and Colin Palmer, eds., The Modern Caribbean (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1989), pp. 21-51. 5461. *Geggus, David P. “The Haitian Revolution,” in Keith Laurence and Manuel Moreno Fraginals, eds., UNESCO General History of the Caribbean, vol. 4, forthcoming. 5462. Geggus, David P. “Jean Kina et la révolution de Saint-Domingue,” in Revue de la Société haïtienne d’histoire et de géographie, 46, 3 (no. 164) (1989), pp. 95-111. 378 5463. Geggus, David P. “Marronage, Voodoo, and the Saint Domingue Slave Revolt,” in Patricia Galloway and Philip Boucher, eds., Proceedings of the 15th Meeting of the French Colonial Historical Society (Martinique, 14-20 May 1989) (Lanham, Md.: niversity Press of America, 1992), pp. 22-35. 5464. Geggus, David P. “On the Eve of the Haitian Revolution: Slave Runaways in Saint Domingue in the Year 1790,” Slavery and Abolition, 6, 3 (1985), pp. 112-28. 5465. Geggus, David P. “Racial Equality, Slavery, and Colonial Secession during the Constituent Assembly,” American Historical Review, 94, 5 (1989), pp. 1290-1308. 5466. Geggus, David P. “The Saint Domingue Slave Revolt: Conflicting Interpretations” (Paper presented to the Association of Caribbean Historians Conference, Guadeloupe, 19-24 March 1989). 5467. Geggus, David P. “Slave and Free Colored Women in Saint Domingue,” in D. B. Gaspar and D. C. Hine, eds., Black Women and Slavery (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1996), pp. 259-78. 5468. Geggus, David P. Slave Resistance Studies and the Saint Domingue Slave Revolt: Some Preliminary Considerations. Miami: Florida International University Latin American and Caribbean Center, 1983. (Occasional Papers Series, no. 4) 5469. Geggus, David P. “Slave, Soldier, Rebel: The Strange Career of Jean Kina,” Jamaican Historical Review, 12 (1980), pp. 33-51. (Notes d’histoire coloniale, no. 205) Revised and translated as “Du charpentier au colonel: Jean Kina et la Révolution de Saint-Domingue,” Revue de la Société haitienne d’histoire et de géographie et de géologie, no. 138 (l983), pp. 5-23. 5470. Geggus, David P. Slavery, War and Revolution: The British Occupation of Saint Domingue, 1793-1798. New York: Oxford University Press, 1981. 5471. Geggus, David P. “The Slaves of British-Occupied Saint-Domingue: An Analysis of the Workforces of 197 Absentee Plantations, 1796-1797,” Caribbean Studies, 18, 1-2 (1978), pp. 5-41. Revised and translated as “Les derniers esclaves de Saint-Domingue: la main d’oeuvre sur 197 plantations dans la zone d’occupation britannique en 1796/97: partie I,” Revue de la Société haïtienne d’histoire et de géographie, 46 (no. 161) (1988), pp. 85-111. 5472. Geggus, David P. “Le soulèvement d’août 1791 et ses liens avec le vaudou et le marronage” (Paper presented to conference on “Haiti et la Révolution Française: Filiations et Ruptures”, Port-au-Prince, 5-9 Dec. 1989). Forthcoming in Actes du Colloque sur la Révolution française: filiations et ruptures (Port-au-Prince). 5473. *Geggus, David P. “Soulèvement manqué d’esclaves ou manifestation de gens de couleur? La révolte de Jean Kina au Fort-Royal, décembre 1800”, Annales des Antilles (forthcoming). Abridged as “La révolte de Jean Kina à Fort-Royal,” Revue de la Société haïtienne d’histoire et de géographie et de géologie, no. 140 (1983), pp. 12-25. 379 5474. Geggus, David P. “Sugar and Coffee Production in Saint Domingue and the Shaping of the Slave Labor Force,” in Berlin and Morgan, eds., Cultivation and Culture, pp. 73-98. 5475. Geggus, David P. “Toussaint Louverture and the Slaves of the Bréda Plantations,” Journal of Caribbean History, 20, 1 (1985-86), pp. 30-48. 5476. 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