
New Orleans is an iconic city, which was once located at the crossroads of early America and the Atlantic World. New Orleans became a major American metropolis as its slave population exploded; in the early nineteenth century, slaves made up one third of the urban population. In contrast to our typical understanding of rural, localized, isolated bondage in the emergent Deep South, daily experience...
Series: Cambridge Studies on the African Diaspora
Hardcover: 260 pages
Publisher: Cambridge University Press (November 7, 2016)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1107133718
ISBN-13: 978-1107133716
Product Dimensions: 6.2 x 0.8 x 9.4 inches
Amazon Rank: 1793654
Format: PDF ePub Text djvu ebook
- Rashauna Johnson pdf
- Rashauna Johnson ebooks
- English pdf
- History epub books
- 1107133718 pdf
y in New Orleans were global, interconnected, and transient. Slavery's Metropolis uses slave circulations through New Orleans between 1791 and 1825 to map the social and cultural history of enslaved men and women and the rapidly shifting city, nation, and world in which they lived. Investigating emigration from the Caribbean to Louisiana during the Haitian Revolution, commodity flows across urban-rural divides, multiracial amusement places, the local jail, and freedom-seeking migrations to Trinidad following the War of 1812, it remaps the history of slavery in modern urban society.