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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
141

The Trials of Phillis and Her Children: The First Fugitive Slave Case in Indiana Territory 1804-1808

Crenshaw, Gwendolyn J. January 1987 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
142

Trälarnas ekonomiska roll i det vikingatida Skandinavien / The Economical roll of the thrall in Viking-age Scandinavia

Björndahl, Peter January 2021 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to address key questions concerning the status and roles of enslaved groups (thralls) in Viking-Age Scandinavia. The thesis focuses on the lives of thralls at two levels; first within the local context of the household and farm (described here as the ‘microenvironment’), and second within the wider ‘macroenvironment’ of Scandinavian society. In particular, the study seeks to uncover the different practical and economic roles that were fulfilled by thralls within these contexts, and in doing so to explore how slaveholding communities benefitted from the exploitation of these people. In order to address these issues, the thesis critically examines the archeological material associated with thralls and discusses the various issues associated with the interpretation of this evidence. Given the inherent difficulty of identifying thralls in the archaeological record, this study also utilizes a range of contemporaneous and later medieval textual sources, including the Icelandic sagas and the earliest surviving Scandinavian law codes, as a means of contextualizing the discussion of material evidence. In exploring the diverse range of archaeological evidence and textual sources available to us, the author concludes that thralls played a significant role among Scandinavian communities as a source of both domestic and economic labor. Through this, they also involuntarily helped Scandinavian communities to mount and sustain trading, raiding and settlement activity in Europe and beyond. In reaching this conclusion, the author draws upon a number of sources pointing to a significant need for (unfree?) labor, for example in tasks such as textile production. When combined with a high-level of access to slaves through raiding and trading activity, it seems logical that Viking-Age communities would have exploited thralls in this way. Given the regular appearance of thralls in both the early Scandinavian law codes and sagas, furthermore, it is likely that these people represented a prominent social group within both social and labor-related contexts.
143

The Afro-american Slave Music Project: Building A Case For Digital History

Cepero, Laura 01 January 2013 (has links)
This public history thesis project experimented with the application of new technology in creating an educational resource aimed at twenty-first century public audiences. The project presents the history, musicology, and historiography of Afro-American slave music in the United States. In doing so, the project utilizes two digital media tools: VuVox, to create interactive collages; and VisualEyes, to create digital visualizations. The purpose of this thesis is to assess how the project balances the goals of digital history, public history, and academic history. During the production of the Afro-American Slave Music Project, a number of the promises of digital history were highlighted, along with several of the potential challenges of digital history. In designing the project, compensations had to be made in order to minimize the challenges while maximizing the benefits. In effect, this thesis argues for the utility of digital history in a public setting as an alternative to traditional, prose-based academic history.
144

Physicians, Women, and Slaves: The Professionalization of Medicine in the Long Nineteenth Century

Zernich, Nicole M. 04 September 2014 (has links)
No description available.
145

Scarlett's Sisters: The Privileged Negotiations of Plantation Women

Weissman-Galler, Nancy January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
146

Behind the mask: another perspective on the slavewomen's oral narratives

Lecaudey, Hélène 24 July 2012 (has links)
In the last twenty years, studies in Afro-American slavery have given special attention to the slave community and culture. They have emphasized the slaves' control over their lives, while glossing over the brutality of the institution of slavery. Slave women have been ignored until very recently, and those few historians who studied their lives have applied the same categories of inquiry used by traditional historians with a male perspective. The topic of interracial sexual relations crystallizes this problem. This issue has been left aside in most scholarly studies and, when mentioned, addressed more often than not from a male perspective. As sexual abuse, it exemplifies the harshness of slavery. The oral slave narratives, often referred to by the same historians, are one of the few primary sources by and on slave women. Yet, historians have not used them adequately in research on slave women, primarily because of inadequate conceptual frameworks. / Master of Arts
147

Sparta en Athene: ’n studie in altérité

Murray, G.N. 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Ancient Studies)--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / The main purpose of this study is to investigate and describe the differences between the fifth-century city states of Athens and Sparta. The approach I use is that of altérité (“otherness”). I look in particular at four of the most important social phenomena: women, slaves, the army and the political structures. In these respects there are extensive differences between the two city states: Athens acquired its slaves through buying them or as spoils of war over time and on an individual basis; Sparta conquered and enslaved a whole nation, the Messenians, early on to serve permanently as their slaves. Athenian women enjoyed no social or legal freedom or rights; Spartan women enjoyed all these rights and could own and inherit property and goods. In Athens, since the time of Themistocles the fleet was regarded as much more important than the infantry; Sparta had very early on developed a professional infantry which was regarded as the best right through the Greek-speaking world. Athens started changing its constitution at a relatively late stage, but once started, continued to work on it until they attained an early form of democracy; Sparta never developed beyond the monarchical stage, but did adapt it to suit their needs. The second purpose of this study is to discover and attempt to explain why the above-mentioned differences are so great. The point here is not so much that Athens was the model city state which everybody tried to emulate, but rather that Sparta was the city state which was significantly different from any of the others.
148

Livelihood and status struggles in the mission stations of the Universities' Mission to Central Africa (UMCA), north-eastern Tanzania and Zanzibar, 1864-1926

Greenfield-Liebst, Michelle January 2017 (has links)
This thesis is about the social, political, and economic interactions that took place in and around the Universities’ Mission to Central Africa (UMCA) in two very different regions: north-eastern Tanzania and Zanzibar. The mission was for much of the period a space in which people could – often inventively – make a living through education, employment, and patronage. Indeed, particularly in the period preceding British colonial rule, most Christians were mission employees (usually teachers) and their families. Being Christian was, in one sense, a livelihood. In this era before the British altered the political economy, education had only limited appeal, while the teaching profession was not highly esteemed by Africans, although it offered some teachers the security and status of a regular income. From the 1860s to the 1910s, the UMCA did not offer clear trajectories for most of the Africans interacting with it in search of a better life. Markers of coastal sophistication, such as clothing or Swahili fluency, had greater social currency, while the coast remained a prime source of paid employment, often preferable to conditions offered by the mission. By the end of the period, Christians were at a social and economic advantage by virtue of their access to formal institutional education. This was a major shift and schooling became an obvious trajectory for future employment and economic mobility. Converts, many of whom came from marginal social backgrounds, sought to overcome a heritage of exploitative social relations and to redraw the field for the negotiation of dependency to their advantage. However, as this thesis shows, the mission also contributed to new sets of exploitative social relations in a hierarchy of work and education.
149

Comercio de escravos do Sul para o Sudeste, 1850-1888 : economias microregionais, redes de negociantes e experiência cativa / Slave trade from South to South-east, 1850-1888 : local economies, traders networks and slave experience

Scheffer, Rafael da Cunha, 1981- 21 August 2018 (has links)
Orientador: Robert Wayne Andrew Slenes / Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campionas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-21T06:00:46Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Scheffer_RafaeldaCunha_D.pdf: 2261654 bytes, checksum: b4286db176e750878ec4ba3ed70f9e30 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2012 / Resumo: Analisando a questão do trabalho escravo em Santa Catarina e Rio Grande do Sul, diversos historiadores apontaram a importância do tráfico interno para o fim da escravidão nessas províncias. O presente trabalho visa exatamente dar profundidade a esse tema, analisando o mercado de escravos em diversas cidades sulistas, na segunda metade do século XIX. Investigando o comércio local e interprovincial, procuro calcular seu volume e formas de operação, seu impacto na população cativa dessas províncias e suas conexões com uma cidade importadora dessa mão de obra no Sudeste, Campinas. Busco ainda os comerciantes envolvidos neste negócio, a maneira com que atuavam neste mercado, investigando algumas experiências como negociantes de escravos, de construção de laços e redes comerciais. Para este trabalho, desenvolvi séries com diversas fontes. Registros cartoriais de compra e venda de cativos e procurações que autorizavam a negociação desses trabalhadores foram analisados para todas as cidades selecionadas para estudo. Além disso, anúncios de compra e venda de escravos, impostos sobre a sua comercialização e diversas outras fontes oficiais foram utilizadas para elucidar as questões levantadas. Por fim, explorei fontes judiciais como processos cíveis e criminais para buscar informações complementares sobre os envolvidos nesse comércio e suas práticas. Com essa pesquisa, percebi como o mercado de escravos dessas cidades esteve ligado ao nacional. A compra de escravos nas províncias do Sul do Brasil para a revenda no Sudeste ocorreu de forma constante no período estudado, tendo seu ápice na década de 1870. Enviados em pequenos grupos através de linhas regulares de vapor ou de caminhos por terra, jovens trabalhadores do Sul chegaram em grande número para suprir a demanda de braços de Campinas e região. Diversos comerciantes se envolveram nessas transferências, na maioria das vezes desenvolvido ao mesmo tempo que outras atividades comerciais. O volume desse comércio de escravos de Santa Catarina e do Rio Grande do Sul para o Sudeste foi importante para a localidade importadora estudada, teve reflexos na sociedade escravista do Sul do Brasil, mas seu impacto sobre essas população não parece ter sido decisivo o suficiente para responder sozinho pelo declínio da mão de obra escrava X na região, sendo necessário o estudo da mortalidade e especialmente da alforria para a compreensão do fim da escravidão na região / Abstract: Analyzing the issue of slave labor in Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul, many historians have pointed out the importance of internal slave trade for the end of slavery in those provinces. This thesis aims to give depth to this topic, analyzing the slave market in several southern cities in the second half of the nineteenth century. Investigating local and interprovincial trade, I try to calculate its volume and forms of operation, its impact on the captive population of these provinces and their connections to a city that import labor in Southeast, Campinas. I search traders involved in this business, the way they acted in this market, investigating some slave traders experiences and the building of business networks. For this work, I developed series with different sources. Notarial records of purchase and sale of captives and documents that authorize the negotiation of these workers were analyzed for all cities selected for study. In addition, announcements of slave sales, taxes and other official sources were used to elucidate the issues raised. Finally, judicial sources were explored to seek additional information on those involved in this trade and its practices. With this research, I realized how the slave market of these cities was linked to the national slave market. The purchase of slaves in the southern provinces of Brazil for resale in the Southeast occurred steadily during the study period, reaching its height in the 1870s. Sent in small groups through regular lines of steam or paths by land, young southern workers arrived in large numbers to meet the demand for arms at Campinas region. Several merchants were involved in these transfers, mostly developed while other commercial activities. The volume of the slave trade of Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul to Southeast locality was important for importing region, it was reflected in the slave society of southern Brazil, but its impact on these people do not seem to have been decisive enough to answer alone for the decline of slave labor in the region, necessitating the study of mortality and especially the freedom papers for understanding the end of slavery in the region / Doutorado / Historia Social / Doutor em História
150

Espaços negros na cidade pós-abolição: São Carlos, estudo de caso / Black spaces on the post abolition city: São Carlos, case study

Natalia Alexandre Costa 15 May 2015 (has links)
Trata do processo de configuração dos núcleos de fixação urbana de ex-escravos, tendo como estudo de caso a cidade de São Carlos, do interior paulista, a partir de três bairros surgidos contemporaneamente à Abolição, com grande presença negra: Vila Isabel, Vila Nery e Vila Pureza. A historiografia sobre os escravos no período pós-abolição do Brasil vem se tornando cada vez menos rara, no entanto ainda é nebulosa a influência exercida pela herança cultural dos ex-escravos no ambiente da cidade por eles ocupado, considerando aspectos materiais e imateriais. O presente trabalho trata da relação entre os bairros e o espaço em que eles se inseriram, bem como as relações espaciais entre as habitações e outros equipamentos dentro dos próprios núcleos. Analisa, ainda, as moradias, notando a ocupação do lote, a distribuição interna dos ambientes, o uso e representação de cada espaço e as transformações ocorridas ao longo do tempo. Por fim, visa contribuir para ampliar a historiografia do negro em nosso país, a partir de uma perspectiva que o considera ativo e atuante no processo de construção das cidades após abolição. / This configuration process of urban fixing neighborhoods of former slaves, taking as a case study the city of São Carlos, in São Paulo State, from three districts emerged contemporaneously with the abolition of slavery, with large black presence: Vila Isabel, Vila Nery and Vila Pureza. The historiography of the slaves in the post-abolition period in Brazil is becoming less and less rare, however it is still cloudy the influence of the cultural heritage of the former slaves in the city environment they occupy, considering material and immaterial aspects. This paper deals with the relationship between the neighborhoods and the space in which they were inserted, and the spatial relationships between housing and other equipment inside the neighborhoods themselves. It also analyzes the Vilas, noting the lot occupation, the internal distribution of environments, the use and representation of each space and the changes occurring over time. Finally, it aims to contribute to enlarge the historiography of black people in our country, from a perspective that considers them active in the construction process of the cities after abolition (1888).

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