224 pages / 5.50 x 8.50 inches / no illustrations
African-American Studies | History / United States - Southern History | Social Studies / African-American History | Social Studies / Slavery Studies
In Slaves for Hire, John J. Zaborney overturns long-standing beliefs about slave labor in the antebellum South. Previously, scholars viewed slave hiring as an aberration—a modified form of slavery, involving primarily urban male slaves, that worked to the laborer’s advantage and weakened slavery’s institutional integrity. In the first in-depth examination of slave hiring in Virginia, Zaborney suggests that this endemic practice bolstered the institution of slavery in the decades leading up to the Civil War, all but assuring Virginia’s secession from the Union to protect slavery.
“Zaborney is to be saluted for a highly original contribution that scratches well beneath the surface of antebellum society and makes a compelling case that a subject often treated as a curiosity or relic of the slave system was in fact part of its institutional core.”—Phillip W. Magness, Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
“A rounded, well-documented study of slave hiring in Virginia....Slaves For Hire is a rich study, steeped in many individual stories that give valuable insights into the hiring system.”—Christopher Clark, Civil War Book Review
“[Zaborney's] study is particularly notable for its emphasis on the hiring of slave women and children as well as men.”—Journal of Southern History
“Zaborney has written an important book showing that antebellum slavery cannot be understood without recognizing the ubiquity of slave hiring.”—Nicholas Wood, Journal of the Early Republic
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