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Time on the Cross - The Economics of American Slavery (Paperback, Revised)
Loot Price: R471
Discovery Miles 4 710
You Save: R86
(15%)
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Time on the Cross - The Economics of American Slavery (Paperback, Revised)
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List price R557
Loot Price R471
Discovery Miles 4 710
You Save R86 (15%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This remarkable book is written by two econometricians who apply
statistical analysis to the history of American slavery. Their
findings oppose the idea that Southern plantations were inefficient
- the field hands worked hard, their black drivers were
sophisticated, trusted foremen, the economics of scale and
"intensive utilization of labor and capital" built flourishing
"large, scientifically managed business enterprises," not feudal
backwaters. The problem of soil exhaustion was dealt with; the
planters were not "cavalier fops" but entrepreneurs who achieved an
"extraordinarily high labor-force participation rate" which
comprised the old, the very young, the insane and the crippled. A
system of rewards and punishments was accompanied by a versatility
of skills underestimated in the cottonpicker stereotype of slaves.
Conventional wisdom about the breakup of the slave family (planters
preferred stable nuclei), about sexual promiscuity (slave morals
were "prudish" if anything), and the Old South's slave-breeding
(not systematic) is challenged, with the admission that
"ambiguities" remain. One seeming contradiction is the authors'
emphasis on the economic efficiency of the system, and their
simultaneous exertion to show that the slaves on the whole consumed
90% of what they produced. It is the generalities that will excite
debate - the claim that in a worldwide 19th-century context the
South was far from industrially backward, and the more familiar
claim that Southern slaves were widely better off than Northern
free labor. The second volume on "evidence and methods" is a
necessary companion piece. Specialists possess previous familiarity
with Fogel's and Engerman's theses; now general readers can pitch
into the debate that is sure to follow. (Kirkus Reviews)
First published in 1974, Fogel and Engerman's groundbreaking book
reexamined the economic foundations of American slavery, marking
"the start of a new period of slavery scholarship and some
searching revisions of a national tradition" (C. Vann Woodward, New
York Review of Books).
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