William Jennings reconstructs enslaved Africans’ lives on an early sugar plantation through rare manuscripts and archival evidence.
Takeaways
•Jennings centers the enslaved community, especially Dibia, an educated African man forced into slavery, emphasizing identity resilience amid oppression.
•The book draws on a substantial 1690s planter manuscript and archival records, verifying authenticity with detailed cross-references like lunar eclipses and shipping logs.
•Jennings highlights the complexity of plantation life beyond master-slave dynamics, showcasing cultural diversity, linguistic negotiation, family life, and individual agency.
Mind Map
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Chapters
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The Fragility of Society and the Pendulum of ChangeThe Fragility of Society and the Pendulum of ChangeThe Fragility of Society and the Pendulum of ChangeThe Fragility of Society and the Pendulum of Change
This is a chapter‘s title.
The Fragility of Society and the Pendulum of ChangeThe Fragility of Society and the Pendulum of ChangeThe Fragility of Society and the Pendulum of ChangeThe Fragility of Society and the Pendulum of Change
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