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Slavery in Mississippi, first published in 1933, is a deeply
researched and tightly argued social and economic study of slave
life in Mississippi by Charles S. Sydnor (1898-1954). Inspired by
Ulrich B. Phillips's American Negro Slavery (1918) and Life and
Labor in the Old South (1929), Sydnor strived to test Phillips's
contention that slavery was simultaneously a benign institution for
African American slaves and an unprofitable one for their masters.
Sydnor included path-breaking chapters on such broad scholarly
topics as slave labour, slave trading, and the profitability of
slavery, but he also examined in depth slave clothing, food,
shelter, physical and social care, police control, slave fugitives,
and punishments and rewards. More thorough than many previous
historians, Sydnor examined how slavery ""worked"" as a social and
economic system--how slaves actually lived, how planters bought,
cared for, controlled, hired out, and sold their human property.
Historian John David Smith's new introduction to this Southern
Classic edition frames the original text within the scholarship on
slavery in the interwar years, presents its arguments, chronicles
its reception by white and black critics, and highlights the
ongoing debates about slavery, especially on the profitability of
slavery and the conditions of slave life sparked by Sydnor's
influential book.
Here is a vivid picture of late eighteenth-century Virginia's keen
and often hot-tempered local politics. Sydnor has filled his book
with the lively details of campaign practices, the drama of
election day, the workings of the county oligarchies, and the
practical politics of that training school for statesmen, the
Virginia House of Burgesses. A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC
Press Enduring Editions use the latest in digital technology to
make available again books from our distinguished backlist that
were previously out of print. These editions are published
unaltered from the original, and are presented in affordable
paperback formats, bringing readers both historical and cultural
value.
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