Gloria McCahon Whiting is E. Gordon Fox Assistant Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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Description
"Gloria McCahon Whiting's extraordinary and deeply moving first book turns early American history inside out. Painstakingly researched and elegantly composed, Belonging recounts, in a thousand quiet, telling moments-the baptism, the marriage proposal, the death-bed wish-how the intimate lives of Black families, the shattering story of America, is threaded through the archives, each passionate attachment and every wrenching separation." (Jill Lepore, author of These Truths: A History of the United States) "With Belonging, Gloria McCahon Whiting has made a crucial and deeply impactful contribution to our understanding of kinship, reproduction, and race in the early history of North America. By centering the lives of those enslaved in Massachusetts, she pushes on the boundaries of what we think we know, showing with clarity and certainty that Black people lived, labored, and loved in New England despite the violences and griefs they endured at the hands of enslavers. Belonging is required reading for those interested in slavery, the Black Atlantic world, the family, and gender and reproduction." (Jennifer Morgan, author of Reckoning with Slavery: Gender, Kinship, and Capitalism in the Early Black Atlantic) "Built on stunning biographical portraits, Belonging is social history at its best, exploring issues of family formation, personal and community resistance, and the struggle for freedom in eastern Massachusetts in the 150 years leading up to the Revolution. Gloria McCahon Whiting reaches deep into the lives of the enslaved, covering startlingly new ground while at the same time providing us with sophisticated methods to access the records they left of their efforts to build and protect their families. It is a remarkable achievement that will force us to reconsider the ways we have looked at slavery and abolition." (Richard J.M. Blackett, author of Samuel Ringgold Ward: A Life of Struggle) "Interweaving deep data-mining with vivid story-telling, Gloria McCahon Whiting brilliantly limns the intimate lives, sorrows, and activism of Afro-New Englanders who belonged to one another but also to enslavers. An innovative and very important book." (Cornelia Hughes Dayton, co-author of Robert Love's Warnings: Searching for Strangers in Colonial Boston)

