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My Good Fortune - Memoir of a Chinese Orphan's Success in America (Hardcover): Lu Chi Fa, Lorin Lee Cary My Good Fortune - Memoir of a Chinese Orphan's Success in America (Hardcover)
Lu Chi Fa, Lorin Lee Cary
R692 Discovery Miles 6 920 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
My Good Fortune - Memoir of a Chinese Orphan's Success in America (Paperback): Lu Chi Fa, Lorin Lee Cary My Good Fortune - Memoir of a Chinese Orphan's Success in America (Paperback)
Lu Chi Fa, Lorin Lee Cary
R440 Discovery Miles 4 400 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
California Dreaming (Paperback): Lorin Lee Cary California Dreaming (Paperback)
Lorin Lee Cary
R367 Discovery Miles 3 670 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
Slavery in North Carolina, 1748-1775 (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition): Lorin Lee Cary Slavery in North Carolina, 1748-1775 (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
Lorin Lee Cary
R1,444 Discovery Miles 14 440 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Michael Kay and Lorin Cary illuminate new aspects of slavery in colonial America by focusing on North Carolina, which has largely been ignored by scholars in favor of the more mature slave systems in the Chesapeake and South Carolina. Kay and Cary demonstrate that North Carolina's fast-growing slave population, increasingly bound on large plantations, included many slaves born in Africa who continued to stress their African pasts to make sense of their new world. The authors illustrate this process by analyzing slave languages, naming practices, family structures, religion, and patterns of resistance. Kay and Cary clearly demonstrate that slaveowners erected a Draconian code of criminal justice for slaves. This system played a central role in the masters' attempt to achieve legal, political, and physical hegemony over their slaves, but it impeded a coherent attempt at acculturation. In fact, say Kay and Cary, slaveowners often withheld white culture from slaves rather than work to convert them to it. As a result, slaves retained significant elements of their African heritage and therefore enjoyed a degree of cultural autonomy that freed them from reliance on a worldview and value system determined by whites. |Shows that slaves in colonial North Carolina retained significant elements of their native heritage because their owners were reluctant to help them acculturate to white society. (Please see cloth edition, published 8/95.)

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