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Bounded Lives, Bounded Places – Free Black Society in Colonial New Orleans, 1769–1803

Autor Kimberly S. Hanger
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 12 mar 1997
During Louisiana’s Spanish colonial period, economic, political, and military conditions combined with local cultural and legal traditions to favour the growth and development of a substantial group of free blacks. In Bounded Lives, Bounded Places, Kimberly S. Hanger explores the origin of antebellum New Orleans’ large, influential, and propertied free black - or libre - population, one that was unique in the South. Hanger examines the issues libres confronted as they individually and collectively contested their ambiguous status in a complexly stratified society.
Drawing on rare archives in Louisiana and Spain, Hanger reconstructs the world of late-eighteenth-century New Orleans from the perspective of its free black residents, and documents the common experiences and enterprises that helped solidify libres’ sense of group identity. Over the course of three and a half decades of Spanish rule, free people of African descent in New Orleans made their greatest advances in terms of legal rights and privileges, demographic expansion, vocational responsibilities, and social standing. Although not all blacks in Spanish New Orleans yearned for expanded opportunity, Hanger shows that those who did were more likely to succeed under Spain’s dominion than under the governance of France, Great Britain, or the United States.
The advent of U.S. rule brought restrictions to both manumission and free black activities in New Orleans. Nonetheless, the colonial libre population became the foundation for the city’s prosperous and much acclaimed Creoles of Colour during the antebellum era. For its insights into questions of slavery and social identity, Bounded Lives, Bounded Places will be welcomed by scholars in the fields of Latin American history, African American studies, and southern history.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780822318989
ISBN-10: 0822318989
Pagini: 264
Dimensiuni: 156 x 227 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: MD – Duke University Press

Recenzii

"No one has done more to explain the origins of Lousiana's free people of color than Kimberly Hanger. Hanger's mastery of both the literature of free blacks in the New World and her deep understanding of the development of colonial Louisiana enables her to place Louisiana's free people of color in hemisphere perspective, while exposing the fine-grained texture of their daily lives. Bounded Lives, Bounded Places is the best study of free people of color in Spanish Louisiana." - Ira Berlin, University of Maryland

"Bounded Lives, Bounded Places is an original contribution to the study of colonial LouisianaÑan important, but neglected field of study. Hanger focuses upon both ethnic and women's history, and makes a contribution to comparative history." - Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, Professor of History, Emerita, Rutgers University
"No one has done more to explain the origins of Lousiana's free people of color than Kimberly Hanger. Hanger's mastery of both the literature of free blacks in the New World and her deep understanding of the development of colonial Louisiana enables her to place Louisiana's free people of color in hemisphere perspective, while exposing the fine-grained texture of their daily lives. Bounded Lives, Bounded Places is the best study of free people of color in Spanish Louisiana." - Ira Berlin, University of Maryland "Bounded Lives, Bounded Places is an original contribution to the study of colonial LouisianaNan important, but neglected field of study. Hanger focuses upon both ethnic and women's history, and makes a contribution to comparative history." - Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, Professor of History, Emerita, Rutgers University

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"Kimberly Hanger traces the origins of antebellum Louisiana's large and influential free black society to the late eighteenth-century era of Spanish colonial rule, when the entire region, but particularly New Orleans, saw a steady growth in the number of people classified as neither slave nor white. An extraordinarily rich archival trove, especially of government, church and military records, has enabled Hanger to chronicle in remarkable detail the development of this community of "libres" and their negotiation of the precarious and ambiguous place they occupied in colonial Louisiana society. . . . Hanger fills an important lacuna in the history of free blacks in North America."--Roderick A. McDonald, "Slavery and Abolition"