Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World the Slaves Made

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Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, Feb 9, 2011 - History - 864 pages

A testament to the power of the human spirit under conditions of extreme oppression, this landmark history of slavery in the South challenged conventional views by illuminating the many forms of resistance to dehumanization that developed in slave society. 

Displaying keen insight into the minds of both enslaved persons and slaveholders, historian Eugene Genovese investigates the ways that enslaved persons forced their owners to acknowledge their humanity through culture, music, and religion. He covers a vast range of subjects, from slave weddings and funerals, to language, food, clothing, and labor, and places particular emphasis on religion as both a major battleground for psychological control and a paradoxical source of spiritual strength.

A winner of the Bancroft Prize.

 

Contents

Of the Willing and the Obedient
4
and the Children Brought Up
113
THE ROCK AND
159
Work Shall Be
285
THE WALLEY OF
325
and the Coat of Many Colors
443
WHOM GOD HATH HEDGED
585
On Resistance
597
Stolen
599
Standing Up to the Man
613
Brothers Sisters and Nocounts
622
The Bright and Morning Star
658
Abbreviations Used in Notes
667
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About the author (2011)

Eugene D. Genovese was the author of several books, including Roll, Jordan, Roll, for which he won the Bancroft Prize; The Southern Tradition; and The Southern Front. Genovese was known for his Marxist perspective in regards to the study of power, class, and race relations in during plantation life in the old south.  Genovese passed away in 2012.

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