Replanting a slave society : the sugar and cotton revolutions in the Lower Mississippi Valley
著者
書誌事項
Replanting a slave society : the sugar and cotton revolutions in the Lower Mississippi Valley
(Jeffersonian America)
University of Virginia Press, 2022
- : cloth
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  岩手
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  秋田
  山形
  福島
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  東京
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  奈良
  和歌山
  鳥取
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  山口
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  愛媛
  高知
  福岡
  佐賀
  長崎
  熊本
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注記
Summary: "This book discusses how new technology led to economic transformation and the rapid expansion of slavery in the lower Mississippi valley after 1800"--Provided by publisher
Bibliography: p. 215-230
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Although it eventually became a regrettably profitable business for enslavers and their partners, a successful slave economy in the American South was no foregone conclusion. Bringing the lower Mississippi valley to the foreground of the history of the early republic, Replanting a Slave Society is the first major study to analyze in tandem the sugar and cotton revolutions that took place in the region in the years before and after the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. It highlights the far-ranging, at times nation-encompassing, consequences of decisions made by a small elite group of planters and merchants in a remote colonial slave society and their effect on the subsequent course of American history.In the mid-1790s, the power and prosperity of the lower Mississippi valley's colonial elites came under threat from revolutionary instability and economic collapse. In response, those elites engaged in a successful effort to remake their society by rapidly adopting sugar and cotton production, adapting them to local conditions, taking advantage of, and advancing, the existing slave trades, and reshaping those slave trades to suit their needs. In 1811, following the successful suppression of the German Coast Insurrection (the largest slave revolt in North American history), these planter elites congratulated themselves on the stability and future prosperity of their "replanted" slave society. These crop revolutions marked a key turning point in the history of the lower Mississippi valley and set the economic and social course that the region-the hub of the Deep South-would follow until the American Civil War.
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