What Sorrows Labour in My Parent's Breast?


A History of the Enslaved Black Family

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By Brenda E. Stevenson
Imprint:
ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
496

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Description

Brenda Stevenson, professor of history at UCLA, is senior editor of the three volume Encyclopedia of Black Women in America (2005), a 2005 Choice Outstanding Academic title, and several books in African American history, including Life in Black and White: Family and Community in the Slave South (1996), winner of the 1997 Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Prize for the Study of Human Rights in North America, and The Contested Murder of Latasha Harlins: Justice, Gender and the Origins of the L.A. Riots (2013) winner of the OAH 2014 James A. Rawley Prize as Best Book on History of Race Relations for 2013.

Introduction: The Black Family in the Public Imagination: What's Slavery and Slavery Scholarship Got to Do with It? Beginnings Chapter One: Traditions from Whence They Came: Marriage and Family in Western/Central Africa at the Time of the Atlantic Slave Trade Chapter Two: The Colonial Slave Family: Foundations and Creations Chapter Three: Traditions of Resistance and Family The Antebellum Familial Experience Chapter Four: Antebellum Courtship and Marital Rituals Chapter Five: Antebellum Family Life Chapter Six: Death and Resurrection Conclusion: Bob Samuels' American Family

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