Significant numbers of the people enslaved throughout world history have been children. The vast literature on slavery has grown to include most of the history of this ubiquitous practice, but nearly all of it concentrates on the adult males whose strong bodies and laboring capacities preoccupied th
Children in Slavery through the Ages
β Scribed by Gwyn Campbell; Suzanne Miers; Joseph C. Miller
- Publisher
- Ohio University Press
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 240
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Significant numbers of the people enslaved throughout world history have been children. The vast literature on slavery has grown to include most of the history of this ubiquitous practice, but nearly all of it concentrates on the adult males whose strong bodies and laboring capacities preoccupied the masters of the modern Americas. Children in Slavery through the Ages examines the children among the enslaved across a significant range of earlier times and other places; its companion volume will examine the children enslaved in recent American contexts and in the contemporary/modern world.
This is the first collection to focus on children in slavery. These leading scholars bring our thinking about slaving and slavery to new levels of comprehensiveness and complexity. They further provide substantial historical depth to the abuse of children for sexual and labor purposes that has become a significant humanitarian concern of governments and private organizations around the world in recent decades.
The collected essays in Children in Slavery through the Ages fundamentally reconstruct our understanding of enslavement by exploring the often-ignored role of children in slavery and rejecting the tendency to narrowly equate slavery with the forced labor of adult males. The volumeβs historical angle highlights many implications of child slavery by examining the variety of childrenβs rolesβas manual laborers and domestic servants to court entertainers and eunuchsβand the worldwide regions in which the child slave trade existed.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Editorsβ Introduction
Section I: The Trades in Slave Children
1 Child Slaves in the Early North Atlantic Trade in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries
2 Children and European Slave Trading in the Indian Ocean during the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries
3 Small Change: Children in the Nineteenth-Century East African Slave Trade
4 The Brief Life of βAli, the Orphan of Kordofan: The Egyptian Slave Trade in the Sudan, 1820β35
5 Traded Babies: Enslaved Children in Americaβs Domestic Migration, 1820β60
Section II: The Treatment and Uses of Slave Children through the Ages
Part A. Children Acquired for Social, Political, and Domestic Roles
6 Singing Slave Girls (Qiyan) of the βAbbasid Court in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries
7 Becoming a Devsirme: The Training of Conscripted Children in the Ottoman Empire
8 The Third Gender: Palace Eunuchs
9 The Well-Being of Purchased Female Domestic Servants (Mui Tsai) in Hong Kong in the Early Twentieth Century
Part B. Children in Commercial Slaveries
10 Slave and Other Nonwhite Children in Late-Eighteenth-Century France
11 The Struggle for Survival: Slave Infant Mortality in the British Caribbean in the Late Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
12 Left Behind but Getting Ahead: Antebellum Slaveryβs Orphans in the Chesapeake, 1820β60
Contributors
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Recorded instances of slavery date back to the eighteenth century B.C.E. China and slave practices continue to take place in many countries all over the world. Slavery takes many forms and degrees, often reflecting the values and fissures of the cultures in which it takes place. This necessary volum
This is an academic inquiry into how labor power has been dehumanized and commodified around the world through the ages for capital accumulation and industrialization, and colonial and post-colonial economic transformation. The study explores all major episodes of slaveries beginning from the ancien
Plantations, especially sugar plantations, created slave societies and a racism persisting well into post- slavery periods: so runs a familiar argument that has been used to explain the sweep of Caribbean history. Here one of the most eminent scholars of modern social theory applies this assertion t
Plantations, especially sugar plantations, created slave societies and a racism persisting well into post- slavery periods: so runs a familiar argument that has been used to explain the sweep of Caribbean history. Here one of the most eminent scholars of modern social theory applies this assertion t