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  1. Apr 24, 2024 · ABSTRACT. This article examines the extent to which enslavers across the antebellum South forced enslaved men and women to reproduce. Using a spectrum of violence as a tool of coercion, enslavers coerced, cajoled, and forced enslaved people to reproduce the institution of slavery, selecting specific individuals for their desirable characteristics and then exploited their offspring.

  2. dominance over men and women.”28 However, we must question to what extent enslaved men controlled these relationships if it all hinged on the enslaver’s permission, and could be dismissed ifthey decided to sell either party, or partnerthem withsomeone else. Matters of agency and power complicate how enslaved men tested the boundaries of

  3. Aug 26, 2024 · Between 1790 and 1860, more than 1 million enslaved men, women, and children were transported in a large and profitable domestic trade from the Upper South to the Deep South. Whether through the transatlantic trade or through the domestic trade of enslaved people, the human toll of the slave trade in terror, death, and widespread social disruption is difficult to fathom.

  4. Slave breeding, as coercive, often violent, reproductive practices were known among the enslaved and their descendants, structured African American historical, ethnographic, and cultural understandings of black life in the United States. 2 Close As former slaves like Smith recalled during the depths of the Great Depression, slave masters selected women who were purported to be particularly ...

  5. Apr 19, 2021 · As they grew older, they grew more valuable, and enslaved boys and men were valued higher at market than girls and women. However, the commodification and marketisation of ‘breeding women’ – enslaved women either at the prime of their fertile lives or who had already proven to birth multiple children – were a more complicated story.

  6. Planters allocated land and time for enslaved laborers to cultivate crops, raise animals, harvest fish, and hunt for food. The enslaved would be expected to purchase household goods by selling surplus agricultural goods through legally sanctioned Sunday markets. The time allocated to working provision grounds varied.

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  8. In the American South, enslaved women wielding hoes were contributing to the commercial production of their masters, not to the nourishment of their families. In Africa, woman's primary social ...

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