The era of the American Revolution was one of violent and
unpredictable social, economic, and political change, and the
dislocations of the period were most severely felt in the South.
Sylvia Frey contends that the military struggle there involved a
triangle--two sets of white belligerents and approximately 400,000
slaves. She reveals the dialectical relationships between slave
resistance and Britain's Southern Strategy and between slave
resistance and the white independence movement among Southerners,
and shows how how these relationships transformed religion, law,
and the economy during the postwar years.
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