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S Sarson, S. Sarson, Steven Sarson, Sarson Steven
Tobacco-Plantation South in the Early American Atlantic World
Anglais · Livre Relié
Expédition généralement dans un délai de 1 à 3 semaines (ne peut pas être livré de suite)
Description
Zusatztext "Sarson (Swansea Univ., UK) has written a meticulously researched cis-Atlantic study of wealth, power, and inequality in the early national upper South . . . In five tightly argued chapters, the author shows how the wealthy elite got richer while the poor struggled to survive. The early national tobacco South, as Sarson explicates, was a world structured by possessive-individualist ideology, vicissitudes of Atlantic market forces, inequality, and exploitation . . . Highly recommended." - Choice "The American Revolution did not fulfill its promise in Prince George's County, Maryland. Sarson's new book shows that the break with Britain failed to inaugurate an era of widespread opportunity for enterprising white families - and certainly for free or enslaved African Americans. Tracking the history of inequality in an Upper South county, this impressively researched and persuasively argued study offers a fresh perspective on the formative era of the new nation's history." - Peter S. Onuf, University of Virginia, USA "The Tobacco-Plantation South in the Early American Atlantic World provides a deeply researched and strongly narrated analysis based on the extensive local records of Prince George's County, Maryland, a place marked across the years by Revolutionary crisis and post-war adjustments to independence. Sarson offers a compelling challenge to the enduring myth that political independence paved the way to more widespread property ownership and, with it,egalitarianism. Instead, tobacco plantations, slavery, and landlessness persisted in Prince George's County, along with a social reality of deepening impoverishment." - Cathy Matson, The University of Delaware, USA "Sarson digs deeply in a rich cache of historical archives and records to reconstruct life in a large swath of the Upper South. Admirably, he analyzes the society from top to bottom - from planters to small farmers to the landless majority of the population, consisting of tenants, wage workers, servants, and slaves. This impressive book challenges the age-old agrarian myths, replacing them more appropriately with realities on the ground." - Billy G. Smith, Montana State University, USA, author of Ship of Death: The Voyage that Changed the Atlantic World "If you like seeing myths busted, you'll love this book." - Woody Holton, University of Richmond, USA, author of Forced Founders: Indians, Debtors, Slaves, and the Making of the American Revolution in Virginia Informationen zum Autor STEVEN SARSON is a Lecturer in the Department of History, at Swansea University, UK. Klappentext A look at the extensive inequality and individualism in Prince George's County, Maryland, and the wider tobacco south, this book draws on colonial historiography to take a groundbreaking approach and examines the profound impacts of the structure of the international tobacco trade on local life. "Sarson (Swansea Univ., UK) has written a meticulously researched cis-Atlantic study of wealth, power, and inequality in the early national upper South . . . In five tightly argued chapters, the author shows how the wealthy elite got richer while the poor struggled to survive. The early national tobacco South, as Sarson explicates, was a world structured by possessive-individualist ideology, vicissitudes of Atlantic market forces, inequality, and exploitation . . . Highly recommended." - Choice "The American Revolution did not fulfill its promise in Prince George's County, Maryland. Sarson's new book shows that the break with Britain failed to inaugurate an era of widespread opportunity for enterprising white families - and certainly for free or enslaved African Americans. Tracking the history of inequality in an Upper South county, this impressively researched and persuasively argued study offers a fresh perspective on the formative era of the new nation's history." - Peter S. Onuf, University o...
Table des matières
Introduction: The "Chosen People": Agrarian Myths and Messier Realities Prologue: "The Interest of the County": Prince George's County Levy Court and Local Politics, Economy, and Society "The Way to Make a Huge Fortune": The Planters "One must differentiate oneself a little": Planter Gentility, Economy, Dynasty, and Politics "I Don't Stand to the Will": Yeomen Farmers and Smallholders "Being Allowed the Liberty": Tenant Farmers and Artisans "The Torment with the Servants": Wage Workers, Servants, and Slaves Epilogue: "Objects of Distress": The Poor and the Destitute Appendix: A Statistical Analysis of Wealth Distribution and Mobility
Commentaire
"Sarson (Swansea Univ., UK) has written a meticulously researched cis-Atlantic study of wealth, power, and inequality in the early national upper South . . . In five tightly argued chapters, the author shows how the wealthy elite got richer while the poor struggled to survive. The early national tobacco South, as Sarson explicates, was a world structured by possessive-individualist ideology, vicissitudes of Atlantic market forces, inequality, and exploitation . . . Highly recommended." - Choice
"The American Revolution did not fulfill its promise in Prince George's County, Maryland. Sarson's new book shows that the break with Britain failed to inaugurate an era of widespread opportunity for enterprising white families - and certainly for free or enslaved African Americans. Tracking the history of inequality in an Upper South county, this impressively researched and persuasively argued study offers a fresh perspective on the formative era of the new nation's history." - Peter S. Onuf, University of Virginia, USA
"The Tobacco-Plantation South in the Early American Atlantic World provides a deeply researched and strongly narrated analysis based on the extensive local records of Prince George's County, Maryland, a place marked across the years by Revolutionary crisis and post-war adjustments to independence. Sarson offers a compelling challenge to the enduring myth that political independence paved the way to more widespread property ownership and, with it,egalitarianism. Instead, tobacco plantations, slavery, and landlessness persisted in Prince George's County, along with a social reality of deepening impoverishment." - Cathy Matson, The University of Delaware, USA
"Sarson digs deeply in a rich cache of historical archives and records to reconstruct life in a large swath of the Upper South. Admirably, he analyzes the society from top to bottom - from planters to small farmers to the landless majority of the population, consisting of tenants, wage workers, servants, and slaves. This impressive book challenges the age-old agrarian myths, replacing them more appropriately with realities on the ground." - Billy G. Smith, Montana State University, USA, author of Ship of Death: The Voyage that Changed the Atlantic World
"If you like seeing myths busted, you'll love this book." - Woody Holton, University of Richmond, USA, author of Forced Founders: Indians, Debtors, Slaves, and the Making of the American Revolution in Virginia
Détails du produit
Auteurs | S Sarson, S. Sarson, Steven Sarson, Sarson Steven |
Edition | Palgrave UK |
Langues | Anglais |
Format d'édition | Livre Relié |
Sortie | 28.12.2012 |
EAN | 9780230111899 |
ISBN | 978-0-230-11189-9 |
Pages | 272 |
Thèmes |
Americas in the Early Modern Atlantic World Americas in the Early Modern A Americas in the Early Modern Atlantic World Americas in the Early Modern A |
Catégories |
Littérature spécialisée
> Histoire
> Autres
Sciences humaines, art, musique > Histoire > Général, dictionnaires B, History, History: specific events & topics, Social History, Social & cultural history, Political science & theory, Political History, History of the Americas, World Politics, imperialism, History, Modern, Palgrave History Collection, Modern History, Imperialism and Colonialism, America—History, United States—History, US History, liberty;slaves;Stand |
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