The Caribbean slave : a biological history

Bibliographic Information

The Caribbean slave : a biological history

Kenneth F. Kiple

(Studies in environment and history)

Cambridge University Press, 1984

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Note

Continues: Another dimension to the Black diaspora. 1981

Bibliography: p. 259-265

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This study focuses on the black biological experience in slavery, in the Caribbean. It begins with a consideration of the rapidly changing disease environment after the arrival of the Spaniards; it also looks at the slave ancestors in their West African homeland and examines the ways in which the nutritional and disease environments of that area had shaped its inhabitants. In a particularly innovative chapter, he considers the epidemiological and pathological consequences of the middle passage for newly enslaved blacks. The balance of the book is devoted to the health of the black slave in the West Indies. Using the general health and level of nutrition of the island whites as a control, Kiple pays especially close attention to the role that nutrition played in the development of diseases. The study closes with a look at the continuing demographic difficulties of the black West Indian from the abolition of slavery.

Table of Contents

  • List of tables
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Part I. Background and Biology: Introduction
  • 1. The peoples and their pathogens
  • 2. West African diet and disease
  • 3. The parameters of West African survival
  • Part II. Diet, Disease, and Demography: Introduction
  • 4. The middle passage and malnutrition
  • 5. Plantation nutrition
  • 6. Malnutrition: morbidity and mortality
  • 7. Slave demography
  • 8. Slave infant and child mortality
  • 9. Black diseases and white medicine
  • Part III. Pathogens and Politics: Introduction
  • 10. Fevers and race
  • 11. Epilogue: diet, disease, and displacement
  • Notes
  • Bibliographic essay
  • Index.

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