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Children Of Bondage
Robert Carl-Heinz Shell

Children Of Bondage

A Social History of the Slave Society at the Cape of Good Hope, 1652-1838

Wesleyan University Press published by University (Jan 01, 1994)
9781868142750
| Physical Copy
501 pages | 150 x 240 mm | South Africa
Dewey 305.56709687
LC Classification HT1394

Genre

  • African Theology (AFR/THEO)

Plot

The Dutch East India Company's introduction of the first slave into the region known as the Cape of Good Hope in 1653 established an institution whose legal status ended in 1838 but whose social and political reverberations are still felt today. Children of Bondage is the story of the social, cultural, and biological progeny of that slave society. Robert Shell examines the complex and highly stratified hierarchies that evolved in South Africa, and outlines how its multiracial system of slavery was distinct from the biracial system that arose in the New World. Shell argues that while frontier and class interests were significant factors in South Africa's history, these influences were secondary manifestations of a more universal force, namely, the family as the fundamental unit of subordination. He explores the history of oceanic and domestic slave trades, sexual and gender relations within the slave hierarchy, religious and ethnic identities among slaves, and the promises and realities of manumission. By viewing the institution of South African slavery from many levels he concludes, "Not only slaves were in bondage; in a profound sense, the owners were as well."

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Added Date Nov 05, 2015 07:10:03
Modified Date Feb 02, 2016 05:33:20