Jessica Catherine Reuther is Assistant Professor of History at Ball State University. Her articles have appeared in The Journal of African History and the Revue d'histoire de l'enfance "irreguliere" (RHEI), and she has contributed to the Oxford Encyclopedia of African Women's History and Oxford Encyclopedia of African Slavery, Slave Trade, and the Diaspora.
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Acknowledgments Introduction: Portrait of a Girl and a Fabric Seller 1. The Value of Girls to the Royal Household of Dahomey, 1720s-1870s 2. Dashing and Entrusting Girls: The Atlanticization of Child Circulation during the Reigns of Kings Gezo and Glele, 1818-1889 3. Agbessipe and Her Mother: Female Wealth, Girl Pawns, and Enslaved Labor in Ouidah during the Era of "Legitimate" Trade, 1840s-1880s 4. A Runaway Girl amidst the Turmoil of Conquest: Household Economies and Colonial Transformations in the Kingdoms of Hogbonou and Dahomey, 1880s-1890s 5. Entrusted or Enslaved? Colonial Legal Debates about Girls' Statuses, 1900s-1930s 6. "Why Did You Not Cry Out . . . ?": Sexual Assaults of Entrusted Girls in Colonial Dahomey, 1917-1941 7. The Tele Affair (1936-1938): Anxieties about Transformations in Girlhood in Colonial Abomey Conclusion: Obscured Histories of Girlhood Glossary of Foreign Terms Notes Bibliography Index

