Chapter Two: Development of Slavery in Mainland North America 64
The Chesapeake 8
The Low Country 82
The Lower Mississippi 96
New England and the Middle Colonies 101
Slavery and Racial Prejudice 110
Chapter Three: African–American Culture 117
Africans in America 119
Demography, Community, and Culture 124
The Daily Toil 133
Family 146
Religion 151
Folk Culture 157
Whites and Blacks, Men and Women, Humanity and Inhumanity 169
Resistance, Escape, Rebellion, and Suicide 174
Chapter Four: The Revolutionary Era 185
Slavery and Ideology 187
Freedom for Some 195
Changing African–American Society 206
The Foundations of Caste 227
Securing the Blessings of Liberty 232
Epilogue 236
Bibliographical Essay 240
Index 289
DONALD R. WRIGHT is Distinguished Teaching Professor of History, Emeritus, at SUNY–Cortland, USA. In 2003 he was Scholar–in–Residence at the Rockefeller Study Center in Bellagio, Italy. He is the author of African Americans in the Early Republic, 1789 1831 and The World and a Very Small Place in Africa: A History of Globalization in Niumi, The Gambia, 3rd ed., and is co–author of The Atlantic World: A History. He lives in Beaufort, South Carolina.