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Bittersweet Childhoods: Enslaved Youth in Nineteenth-Century Louisiana and MartiniqueJanuary 2019 (has links)
archives@tulane.edu / "Bittersweet Childhoods" explores the experiences of enslaved children in nineteenth-century Louisiana and Martinique. Children played a fundamental role in helping their people survive material deprivation, build social networks, and maintain a cultural sense of self. Their labor as slaves on sugar plantations was gradual but central to the functioning of the capitalist ventures that sugar plantations were. I contextualize the lives of enslaved children within changing and competing ideas about childhood in the Atlantic world. Enlightenment notions of children as innocent, malleable beings in need of protection were increasingly normalized in the nineteenth-century, and although enslaved children were not shielded from the violence and deprivation of bondage, their lives were influenced by these changing social and cultural values. During childhood, slaves’ relationships to the planter class were bittersweet, as cultural expectations regarding childhood allowed more leniency, without ever completely sheltering them from the horrors of bondage. In reaction to the labor they owed free and enslaved adults and the hardships they experienced, slave youths rebelled against adults in their own communities, destroyed and stole their owners’ property, ran away, participated in slave rebellions, and voiced their political opinions. Like planters, authorities held different expectations for young slaves and were therefore more lenient when dealing with their rebellious behaviors. While youths were never commodities of choice for planters and their worth declined in the last decades of slavery, they represented a substantial share of the transatlantic, domestic, and local trades that fueled Martinique and Louisiana’s slave markets. Nevertheless, the two regions’ legal protection of children from family separation meant young slaves were less affected by family separation than enslaved children throughout the Americas. Finally, in both societies, children were deeply involved in the processes of emancipation, as the French and U.S. governments sought to alleviate their workload and give them an education to prepare them for freedom and citizenship. Slave children’s involvement in their regions’ processes of emancipation highlights how Martinique’s colonial setting led to prolonged government interference affected slave children differently than in Louisiana, where planters’ rights were paramount until the federal occupation during the Civil War. / 1 / Alix Riviere
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Origin of the pioneer planters of South Carolina, 1670-1696Carrigan, Richard Mabin. January 1937 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. M.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1937. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [104-111]).
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Comparing alternative landscapes power negotiations in enslaved communities in Louisiana and the Bahamas, an archaeological and historical perspective /Anderson, Nesta Jean, Wilson, Samuel M., January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2004. / Supervisor: Samuel M. Wilson. Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Embodying development : a study of female flower workers in EcuadorCoulson, Justine Anna January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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The viability of energy plantations in Thailand : an energy system approach using alternative conversion pathwaysFletcher, Donald George January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Factors influencing wind damage to Sitka spruce treesBlackburn, Paul January 1986 (has links)
Windthrow is a major influence on silvicultural practice in the UK. Profitability is reduced by the need to fell plantations prematurely. In recent years there has been much debate on the role of spacing and wide- spacing, or respacing has been advocated as a means of improving stability. This debate has lacked quantitative evidence. The purpose of this study was to assess the factors involved in tree stability and to use the results to. investigate the influence of spacing and stability. Using the approach of Petty and Worrell (1981) stability was first considered as a static model. The factors involved are the within canopy wind profile, the stem and crown weight distribution of the trees, the deflection curves assumed by the tree in response to wind loading and the maximum turning moment causing stem breakage or uprooting. Investigation of the influence of spacing on the resistance of Sitka spruce trees to stem breakage and uprooting showed that the maximum turning moment was positively related to the stem weight, dbh3 and dbh/wt. There was no evidence to suggest that the relationship between the maximum turning moment and the independent variables differed between spacings. Analysis of data from Forestry Commission tree pulling experiments revealed that on sites where stem breakage and uprooting occurred the turning moments causing stem breakage and uprooting were similar. The deflection curves of five Sitka spruce trees, growing on a brown earth site, were measured and compared with the theoretical deflection curves devised by Petty and Worrell (1981). The theoretical curves gave reasonable approximations to the actual curves for small deflections. Most of the experimental work was undertaken at the Forestry Commission's experimental area in Moffat Forest where equipment was installed for the monitoring of airflow above and within the forest canopy and of the tree response. Using Forestry Commission data the within canopy wind profile was obtained. Ten Sitka spruce trees were loaded until failure and the stem deflection curves, stem and crown weight distributions and the turning moments causing soil failure and uprooting were measured. The theoretical stem bending curves gave good approximations to the actual curves until soil breakage occurred. Following soil breakage two samples were released and repulled and, although the maximum resistance and the deflection at this point were unaltered, the initial force per unit deflection was halved. The critical wind speeds to cause uprooting were calculated using measured wind profiles and assuming static loading of the crown. Values obtained greatly exceeded the wind speeds recorded during a gale which caused damage. The damping ratios of the 3 trees bearing accelerometers were measured with and without crown contact. For the 2 dominants canopy contact had less effect on the damping ratio than the sway direction whereas for the subdominant the canopy treatment had the greater effect. Recalculation of the critical wind speeds of the ten tree pulling samples, using the damping ratios estimated for the accelerometer trees, and assuming a resonant response reduced the values to within the range of measured gusts recorded during a gale. Displacements of the 3 accelerometer trees, estimated from accelerometer data, were compared with simultaneous wind speed recordings. Perfect resonance was not observed but very large oscillations were noted to build up over a period of 2-3 cycles. The larger gusts (?10m m s-1) tended to produce a static response and to be responsible for the initial deflection whilst subsequent smaller gusts tended to cause the dynamic responses. In order to predict the critical wind speeds causing damage it is necessary to take this dynamic interaction into account. Theoretical stability calculations for unthinned plantations at spacings of 2.0m, 2.4m and 3.0m showed that for static loading the increase in the resistance to uprooting or breakage as a result of increasing mean tree size outweighed the greater drag force on the crown. The wide spaced stand retained its stability advantage even for resonant wind speeds. However, small changes in the within canopy wind profile and the resistance of the trees to uprooting/breakage removed the advantage gained by the wider spacing. More information is required on the influence of spacing on the dynamic response of trees to wind loading before increasing the spacing can be said to improve stability on wet soils.
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Effects of defoliation by Neodiprion sertifer (Geoff.) on the growth of young crops of Pinus contorta DouglBritton, Richard John January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
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Honor, Control, and Powerlessness: Plantation Whipping in the Antebellum SouthDickman, Michael January 2015 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Cynthia Lyerly / This thesis analyzes the practice of whipping during the antebellum South from the perspective of both masters and slaves in an attempt to better understand the brutal form of punishment that served as the physical manifestation of the oppressive nature of American slavery. It examines the distinctive culture of honor to reveal how a rigid divide came to be established and fortified along racial lines. Masters are men who desired to uphold the superior position they held in relation to their slaves, using the whip to enforce order and control. Meanwhile, slaves experienced a deep sense of powerlessness as a result of the practice but examples of aggressive resistance to their masters are present. This thesis seeks to shed light on one of the darkest chapters of American history. / Thesis (BA) — Boston College, 2015. / Submitted to: Boston College. College of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Departmental Honors. / Discipline: History.
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Plantation frontiers : race, ethnicity, and family along the Brazos River of Texas, 1821-1886 /Kelley, Sean Michael, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 425-482). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
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The southern plantation a study in the development and the accuracy of a tradition.Gaines, Francis Pendleton, January 1924 (has links)
Published also as thesis, Columbia University, 1924. / Bibliographical notes: p. 237-243.
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