Beyond Racism and Poverty: The Truck System on Louisiana Plantations and Dutch Peateries, 1865-1920: Studies in Global Slavery, cartea 3
Autor Karin Lurvinken Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 ian 2021
By using a variety of historical sources and by analyzing the perspectives of both employers and workers, Lurvink provides new insights into how the truck system worked and can be explained. She reveals how the system was not only coercive but had advantages for the workers as well, which should not be overlooked.
Preț: 345.50 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 518
Preț estimativ în valută:
66.12€ • 69.54$ • 55.08£
66.12€ • 69.54$ • 55.08£
Carte indisponibilă temporar
Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:
Se trimite...
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004447172
ISBN-10: 9004447172
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Global Slavery
ISBN-10: 9004447172
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Global Slavery
Cuprins
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations and Conventions
Glossary
Introduction
The Truck System—A Nineteenth-Century Global Phenomenon
American Historians Discussing the Truck System—Racism
Dutch Historians Discussing the Truck System—Poverty
Selecting the Research Cases
Rational Choice-Approach
Voice from the Past: Source Material
Outline
1 Bayous and Bogs—The Geography of Isolation
The Louisiana Countryside
Louisiana Rivers, Creeks, Lakes, and Bayous
Railroads—An Improved Connection to the Outside World
Dutch Roads and Highways of Water
2 Truck Payments
Fields of Cotton and Sugarcane
Permanent and Seasonal Peat Lands
Truck Payments
Direct Non-Cash—Something to Eat and a Few Rags to Wear?
Indirect Non-Cash—The Company Store
Colorful Tokens and Handwritten Store Notes
Living off Future Income
Piles of Greenbacks, Dollars, and Guilders
Conclusions
3 Abuse? The Effects of the Truck System
Whiskey, Jenever, and Alcoholics
High Price, Low Quality
Usurious Interest Rates
Debt Peonage
Conclusions
4 Costs and Benefits—The Employer’s Perspective
Costs—The Opposite of the Truck System
Economic Forces and Financial Difficulties
Strapped for Cash
Miserable Years and Declining Profits
‘The Queerest Looking Creatures’—Labor Supply and Productivity
‘The Misery of this Time’ and Truck Payment Methods
Conclusions
5 Carrots, Cake, and Candy—The Store as a Positive Incentive
Presents ‘Joyfully Accepted’
Facilitating Commerce
Self-sufficient Little Worlds of Their Own?
The Alternative Marketplace –‘A Welcome Sight to the Rural Resident’
Credit Scarcity
Consumerism and the Physical Artifacts of Modern Life
‘From Something to Eat, to Something to Work, to Something to Wear’
Shopping in the Peat Employer’s Store—‘The More We Take, the More We Have’
Access to Desires
Conclusions
6 Sticks and Strikes—The Store as a Negative Incentive
Debating and Denouncing the Truck System
‘No Way to Check the Honesty of the Records’
Lack of Freedom
Racist Truck System?
Conclusions
7 The Power of Racism and Class
Increasing Terror
Declining Resistance
Racism and the Truck System
No Truck, No Job
Lowest Class of Society
Conclusions
Conclusion
Main Conclusions
Racism and Poverty
Beyond Louisiana and the Netherlands: Suggestions for Future Research
Appendices
Appendix 1. Louisiana Database and Method of Analysis
Creating the Database
Method of Analysis
Appendix 2. Dutch Database and Method of Analysis
Appendix 3. Harry Baptiste and Samuel Taylor—Oral History Interview 2011
Appendix 4. Isolation and Infrastructure
Sources
Unpublished Sources
Peateries
Plantation Administrations
Photographs
Tokens
Interviews
Printed Sources
Newspapers
Dutch Newspapers
Universiteitsbibliotheek Vrije Universiteit
Government Documents
Dutch Government Documents
Second Chamber Reports
First Chamber Reports
Maps
Miscellaneous
Published sources
Price Data
Travel Accounts
Miscellaneous
Bibliography
Literature
Unpublished Studies
Index
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations and Conventions
Glossary
Introduction
The Truck System—A Nineteenth-Century Global Phenomenon
American Historians Discussing the Truck System—Racism
Dutch Historians Discussing the Truck System—Poverty
Selecting the Research Cases
Rational Choice-Approach
Voice from the Past: Source Material
Outline
1 Bayous and Bogs—The Geography of Isolation
The Louisiana Countryside
Louisiana Rivers, Creeks, Lakes, and Bayous
Railroads—An Improved Connection to the Outside World
Dutch Roads and Highways of Water
2 Truck Payments
Fields of Cotton and Sugarcane
Permanent and Seasonal Peat Lands
Truck Payments
Direct Non-Cash—Something to Eat and a Few Rags to Wear?
Indirect Non-Cash—The Company Store
Colorful Tokens and Handwritten Store Notes
Living off Future Income
Piles of Greenbacks, Dollars, and Guilders
Conclusions
3 Abuse? The Effects of the Truck System
Whiskey, Jenever, and Alcoholics
High Price, Low Quality
Usurious Interest Rates
Debt Peonage
Conclusions
4 Costs and Benefits—The Employer’s Perspective
Costs—The Opposite of the Truck System
Economic Forces and Financial Difficulties
Strapped for Cash
Miserable Years and Declining Profits
‘The Queerest Looking Creatures’—Labor Supply and Productivity
‘The Misery of this Time’ and Truck Payment Methods
Conclusions
5 Carrots, Cake, and Candy—The Store as a Positive Incentive
Presents ‘Joyfully Accepted’
Facilitating Commerce
Self-sufficient Little Worlds of Their Own?
The Alternative Marketplace –‘A Welcome Sight to the Rural Resident’
Credit Scarcity
Consumerism and the Physical Artifacts of Modern Life
‘From Something to Eat, to Something to Work, to Something to Wear’
Shopping in the Peat Employer’s Store—‘The More We Take, the More We Have’
Access to Desires
Conclusions
6 Sticks and Strikes—The Store as a Negative Incentive
Debating and Denouncing the Truck System
‘No Way to Check the Honesty of the Records’
Lack of Freedom
Racist Truck System?
Conclusions
7 The Power of Racism and Class
Increasing Terror
Declining Resistance
Racism and the Truck System
No Truck, No Job
Lowest Class of Society
Conclusions
Conclusion
Main Conclusions
Racism and Poverty
Beyond Louisiana and the Netherlands: Suggestions for Future Research
Appendices
Appendix 1. Louisiana Database and Method of Analysis
Creating the Database
Method of Analysis
Appendix 2. Dutch Database and Method of Analysis
Appendix 3. Harry Baptiste and Samuel Taylor—Oral History Interview 2011
Appendix 4. Isolation and Infrastructure
Sources
Unpublished Sources
Peateries
Plantation Administrations
Photographs
Tokens
Interviews
Printed Sources
Newspapers
Dutch Newspapers
Universiteitsbibliotheek Vrije Universiteit
Government Documents
Dutch Government Documents
Second Chamber Reports
First Chamber Reports
Maps
Miscellaneous
Published sources
Price Data
Travel Accounts
Miscellaneous
Bibliography
Literature
Unpublished Studies
Index
Notă biografică
Dr. Karin Lurvink (1987), Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, obtained her Ph.D. in 2016 and is currently a Postdoctoral Researcher. She works on the project ‘Slaves, Commodities, and Logistics’, which is looking at the impact of slavery on the Dutch economy.