1.
Johnson W, dawsonera. River of dark dreams: slavery and empire in the cotton kingdom [Internet]. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press; 2013. Available from: https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://idp.bris.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780674074880
2.
Patterson O. Slavery and social death: a comparative study. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1982.
3.
Ferreira RA, Cambridge Books Online (Online service). Cross-Cultural Exchange in the Atlantic World: Angola and Brazil during the Era of the Slave Trade [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2012. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139025096
4.
The Code Noir (The Black Code) [Internet]. Available from: https://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/d/335/
5.
Weiner MF. Sex, sickness, and slavery: illness in the antebellum South. Hough M, editor. Urbana: University of Illinois Press; 2014.
6.
Kiddy EW. Blacks of the rosary: memory and history in Minas Gerais, Brazil. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press; 2005.
7.
Dean W. Rio Claro: a Brazilian plantation system, 1820-1920. Stanford [Calif.]: Stanford University Press; 1976.
8.
Stein SJ. Vassouras: a Brazilian coffee county, 1850-1900. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1957.
9.
Bergad L. The Comparative Histories of Slavery in Brazil, Cuba, and the United States [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2007. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511803970
10.
Eltis D, Lewis FD, Sokoloff KL, Cambridge Books Online (Online service). Slavery in the Development of the Americas [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2004. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511512124
11.
Foner L, Genovese, Eugene D. Slavery in the New World: a reader in comparative history. Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Prentice-Hall; 1969.
12.
Heuman GJ, Walvin J. The slavery reader. London: Routledge; 2003.
13.
Walvin J. Questioning slavery. London: Routledge; 1996.
14.
Davis DB. Inhuman bondage: the rise and fall of slavery in the New World. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2006.
15.
O’Connell Davidson J, dawsonera. Modern slavery: the margins of freedom [Internet]. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2015. Available from: https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://idp.bris.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781137297297
16.
Huzzey R, ProQuest (Firm). Freedom burning: anti-slavery and empire in Victorian Britain [Internet]. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 2012. Available from: http://lib.myilibrary.com/browse/open.asp?id=681643&entityid=https://idp.bris.ac.uk/shibboleth
17.
Drescher S. White Atlantic? The Choice for African Slave Labor in the Plantation Americas. Slavery in the Development of the Americas [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2004. p. 31–69. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511512124
18.
Brion Davis D. The Origins of Anti black Racism in the New World. Inhuman bondage: the rise and fall of slavery in the New World. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2006. p. 48–76.
19.
Patterson O. The Internal Relations of Slavery. Slavery and social death: a comparative study. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1982.
20.
US Declaration of Independence: A Transcription | National Archives [Internet]. Available from: https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/declaration-transcript
21.
Haitian Declaration of Independence (in translation) [Internet]. Available from: https://today.duke.edu/showcase/haitideclaration/declarationstext.html
22.
Heuman GJ, Walvin J. Part One: The Atlantic Slave Trade. The slavery reader. London: Routledge; 2003. p. 3–74.
23.
Brion Davis D. How Africans became Integral to New World History. Inhuman bondage: the rise and fall of slavery in the New World. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2006. p. 77–102.
24.
Brion Davis D. The Ancient Foundations of Modern Slavery. Inhuman bondage: the rise and fall of slavery in the New World. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2006. p. 27–47.
25.
Modern Slavery Act 2015 [Internet]. Available from: http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2015/30/contents/enacted
26.
Lambert D. Master–Horse–Slave: Mobility, Race and Power in the British West Indies, c.1780–1838. Slavery & Abolition. 2015 Oct 2;36(4):618–641.
27.
Karl  Jacoby. Slaves by nature? Domestic animals and human slaves. Slavery and Abolition [Internet]. Taylor & Francis Group; 15(1). Available from: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01440399408575117
28.
O’Connell Davidson J, dawsonera. Modern slavery: the margins of freedom [Internet]. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2015. Available from: https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://idp.bris.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9781137297297
29.
Amistad [Internet]. 1997. Available from: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118607/
30.
Genovese E. Chapter. Roll, Jordan, roll: the world the slaves made. New York: Pantheon Books; 1974. p. 1–25.
31.
Irvin Painter N. Soul Murder and Slavery. Southern history across the color line. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press; 2002. p. 15–39.
32.
Freyre G, Putnam S. The masters and the slaves (Casa-Grande & senzala): a study in the development of Brazilian civilization. Abridged ed. of 2nd rev. English-language ed. New York: A.A. Knopf; 1964.
33.
Tadman M. ‘The persistent myth of paternalism: historians and the nature of master-slave relations in the American South’. Sage Race Relations Abstracts; 23(1):7–23.
34.
Glymph T. Out of the House of Bondage: The Transformation of the Plantation Household [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2008. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511812491
35.
Blassingame JW. The slave community: plantation life in the antebellum south. New York: Oxford U.P.; 1972.
36.
Gutman HG. The black family in slavery and freedom, 1750-1925. Oxford: Blackwell; 1976.
37.
Diane Miller Sommerville. Moonlight, Magnolias, and Brigadoon; or, ‘Almost Like Being in Love’: Mastery and Sexual Exploitation in Eugene D. Genovese’s Plantation South. Radical History Review [Internet]. Duke University Press; 2004;88(1):68–82. Available from: https://muse.jhu.edu/article/50938
38.
Phillips, Ulrich Bonnell, 1877-1934. American Negro SlaveryA Survey of the Supply, Employment and Control of Negro Labor as Determined by the Plantation Regime [Internet]. Available from: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/11490#download
39.
Skuban WE. Lines in the sand: nationalism and identity on the Peruvian-Chilean frontier. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press; 2007.
40.
Schafer JK. Slavery, the civil law, and the Supreme Court of Louisiana. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 1994.
41.
Sommerville DM. Rape and race in the nineteenth-century South. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press; 2004.
42.
Fogel RW, Engerman SL. Time on the Cross: the economics of American negro slavery. London: Wildwood House; 1974.
43.
Gone with the Wind [Internet]. 1939. Available from: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0031381/
44.
Dunn RS. A Tale of Two Plantations: Slave Life at Mesopotamia in Jamaica and Mount Airy in Virginia, 1799 to 1828. The William and Mary Quarterly. 1977 Jan;34(1).
45.
Morgan J. ‘Hannah and Hir Children’: Reproduction and Creolization Among Enslaved Women. Laboring women: reproduction and gender in New World slavery. Philadelphia, Pa: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2004.
46.
Tadman M. The Demographic Cost of Sugar: Debates on Slave Societies and Natural Increase in the Americas. The American Historical Review. 2000 Dec;
47.
Turner S. Home-grown Slaves: Women, Reproduction, and the Abolition of the Slave Trade, Jamaica 1788-1807. Journal of Women’s History. 2011;23(3):39–62.
48.
MORGAN K. Slave Women and Reproduction in Jamaica, c.1776-1834. History. 2006 Apr;91(302):231–253.
49.
Berry DRamey. Teaching Ar’n’t I a Woman? Journal of Women’s History. 2007;19(2):139–145.
50.
Deborah G. White. Female Slaves: Sex Roles and Status in the Antebellum Plantation South. Journal of Family History [Internet]. 1983;248–261. Available from: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1026.327
51.
Smithers GD. Slave breeding: sex, violence, and memory in African American history. Gainesville: University Press of Florida; 2013.
52.
12 Years a Slave [Internet]. 2013. Available from: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2024544/
53.
Turner S. Slavery, Freedom, and Women’s Bodies. Journal of Women’s History. 2017;29(1):177–187.
54.
Fett SM. Working cures: healing, health, and power on Southern slave plantations. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press; 2002.
55.
Hogarth RA. Medicalizing blackness: making racial differences in the Atlantic world, 1780-1840. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 2017.
56.
Weiner MF. Sex, sickness, and slavery: illness in the antebellum South. Hough M, editor. Urbana: University of Illinois Press; 2014.
57.
Schwartz MJ. Birthing a slave: motherhood and medicine in the antebellum South. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; 2009.
58.
Pôrto Â. O sistema de saúde do escravo no Brasil do século XIX: doenças, instituições e práticas terapêuticas. História, Ciências, Saúde-Manguinhos. 2006 Dec;13(4):1019–1027.
59.
Cooper Owens DB. Medical bondage: race, gender, and the origins of American gynecology. Athens: The University of Georgia Press; 2017.
60.
Turner S. Contested bodies: pregnancy, childrearing, and slavery in Jamaica. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2017.
61.
Sergio Lussana. To See Who Was Best on the Plantation: Enslaved Fighting Contests and Masculinity in the Antebellum Plantation South. The Journal of Southern History [Internet]. Southern Historical AssociationSouthern Historical Association; 2010;76(4):901–922. Available from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27919283?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
62.
Fuentes MJ. Chapter 1. Jane: Fugitivity, Space, and Structures of Control in Bridgetown. Dispossessed lives: enslaved women, violence, and the archive [Internet]. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2016. p. 13–45. Available from: https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/bristol/reader.action?docID=4540299&ppg=24
63.
Hartman S. Chapter. Scenes of subjection: terror, slavery, and self-making in nineteenth-century America. New York: Oxford University Press; 1997. p. 17–48.
64.
Paton D, dawsonera. No bond but the law: punishment, race, and gender in Jamaican state formation, 1780-1870 [Internet]. Durham: Duke University Press; 2004. Available from: https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://idp.bris.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780822386148
65.
Forret J. Slave against slave: plantation violence in the old South. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 2015.
66.
Lussana S, dawsonera. My brother slaves: friendship, masculinity, and resistance in the Antebellum South [Internet]. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky; 2016. Available from: https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://idp.bris.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780813166964
67.
Baptist EE. The half has never been told: slavery and the making of American capitalism. New York: Basic Books; 2014. p. 111–144.
68.
Johnson W. Soul by soul: life inside the antebellum slave market. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1999. p. 117–134.
69.
Reis JJ. Slave rebellion in Brazil: the Muslim uprising of 1835 in Bahia. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; 1993.
70.
Django Unchained [Internet]. 2012. Available from: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1853728/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
71.
Livesey A. Conceived in violence: enslaved mothers and children born of rape in nineteenth-century Louisiana. Slavery & Abolition. 2017 Apr 3;38(2):373–391.
72.
Johnson W. On Agency. Journal of Social History. 2003 Sep 1;37(1):113–124.
73.
Walvin J. Chapter of Questioning slavery: ‘Cultivating Independence’. Questioning slavery. London: Routledge; 1996. p. 136–157.
74.
Fuentes MJ. Dispossessed lives: enslaved women, violence, and the archive. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2016.
75.
Lussana S, dawsonera. My brother slaves: friendship, masculinity, and resistance in the Antebellum South [Internet]. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky; 2016. Available from: https://www.dawsonera.com/guard/protected/dawson.jsp?name=https://idp.bris.ac.uk/shibboleth&dest=http://www.dawsonera.com/depp/reader/protected/external/AbstractView/S9780813166964
76.
Genovese ED. Roll, Jordan, roll: the world the slaves made. New York: Pantheon Books; 1974. p. 443–566.
77.
Paton D. The Cultural Politics of Obeah: Religion, Colonialism and Modernity in the Caribbean World [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2015. Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139198417
78.
Gordon-Reed A. The Hemingses of Monticello: an American family. New York: W.W. Norton; 2009.
79.
Forret J. Slave against slave: plantation violence in the old South. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 2015. p. 1–27.
80.
Levine LW. Black culture and black consciousness: Afro-American folk thought from slavery to freedom. New York: Oxford University Press; 1977.
81.
Books by United States. Work Projects Administration (sorted by popularity) - Project Gutenberg [Internet]. Available from: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/3906
82.
Documenting the American South homepage [Internet]. Available from: http://docsouth.unc.edu/
83.
Blassingame JW. Slave testimony. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 1976.
84.
Perdue CL, Barden TE, Phillips RK. Weevils in the wheat: interviews with Virginia ex-slaves. 1st Virginia paperback ed. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia; 1992.
85.
Musher SA. Contesting ‘The Way the Almighty Wants It’: Crafting Memories of Ex-Slaves in the Slave Narrative Collection. American Quarterly. 2001;53(1):1–31.
86.
Krueger R. Brazilian Slaves Represented in their Own Words. Slavery & Abolition. 2002 Aug;23(2):169–186.
87.
Bailey DT. A Divided Prism: Two Sources of Black Testimony on Slavery. The Journal of Southern History. 1980 Aug;46(3).
88.
ProQuest (Firm). Voices from slavery: 100 authentic slave narratives [Internet]. Yetman NR, editor. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover; 2000. Available from: http://lib.myilibrary.com/browse/open.asp?id=565360&entityid=https://idp.bris.ac.uk/shibboleth
89.
Musher S. ‘The Other Slave Narratives: The Works Progress Administration Interviews’. In: Ernest J, editor. The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2014. p. 101–118.
90.
Foster FS. Witnessing slavery: the development of ante-bellum slave narratives. 2nd ed. Madison, Wis: University of Wisconsin Press; 1994.
91.
Ernest J, editor. The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2014.
92.
Spindel DJ. Assessing Memory: Twentieth-Century Slave Narratives Reconsidered. Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 1996 Autumn;27(2).
93.
Woodward CV, Rawick GP. History from Slave Sources. The American Historical Review. 1974 Apr;79(2).
94.
Stewart CA. Long past slavery: representing race in the Federal Writers’ Project. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 2016.
95.
Cowling C. Chapter. Conceiving freedom: women of color, gender, and the abolition of slavery in Havana and Rio de Janeiro. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press; 2013. p. 71–96.
96.
Johnson TA. The enduring function of caste: colonial and modern Haiti, Jamaica, and Brazil The economy of race, the social organization of caste, and the formulation of racial societies. Comparative American Studies An International Journal. 2004 Mar;2(1):61–73.
97.
Petley C. ‘Legitimacy’ and social boundaries: free people of colour and the social order in Jamaican slave society. Social History. 2005 Nov;30(4):481–498.
98.
Budros A. Social Shocks and Slave Social Mobility: Manumission in Brunswick County, Virginia, 1782–1862. American Journal of Sociology. 2004 Nov;110(3):539–579.
99.
Manufacturing Social Class: Ceramic Entrepreneurs and Industrial Slavery in the Old Edgefield District. Available from: http://tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/21619441.2017.1345108
100.
Walvin J. Chapter 8 ‘Cultivating Independence’. Questioning slavery. London: Routledge; 1996.
101.
Morrison KY. Slave Mothers and White Fathers: Defining Family and Status in Late Colonial Cuba. Slavery & Abolition. 2010 Mar;31(1):29–55.
102.
Small S. Racial group boundaries and identities: People of ‘mixed‐race’ in slavery across the Americas. Slavery & Abolition. 1994 Dec;15(3):17–37.
103.
Clark E, ProQuest (Firm). The strange history of the American quadroon: free women of color in the revolutionary Atlantic world [Internet]. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press; 2013. Available from: http://lib.myilibrary.com/browse/open.asp?id=930856&entityid=https://idp.bris.ac.uk/shibboleth
104.
Johnson JM. Death Rites as Birthrights in Atlantic New Orleans: Kinship and Race in the Case of. Slavery & Abolition. 2015 Apr 3;36(2):233–256.
105.
Bush B. White ‘ladies’, coloured ‘favourites’ and black ‘wenches’; some considerations on sex, race and class factors in social relations in white Creole Society in the British Caribbean. Slavery & Abolition. 1981 Dec;2(3):245–262.
106.
Lockley TJ. Crossing the race divide: Interracial sex in antebellum savannah. Slavery & Abolition. 1997 Dec;18(3):159–173.
107.
Vernal F. ‘No Such Thing as a Mulatto Slave’: Legal Pluralism, Racial Descent and the Nuances of Slave Women’s Sexual Vulnerability in the Legal Odyssey of Steyntje van de Kaap, c.1815–1822. Slavery & Abolition. 2008 Mar;29(1):23–47.
108.
Joseph TD. How does racial democracy exist in Brazil? Perceptions from Brazilians in Governador Valadares, Minas Gerais. Ethnic and Racial Studies. 2013 Oct;36(10):1524–1543.
109.
Foster WH. Women slave owners face their historians: versions of maternalism in Atlantic World slavery. Patterns of Prejudice. 2007 Jul;41(3–4):303–320.
110.
Walker T. Slave Labor and Chocolate in Brazil: The Culture of Cacao Plantations in Amazonia and Bahia (17th–19th Centuries). Food and Foodways. 2007 Jun 6;15(1–2):75–106.
111.
Walvin J. Chapter 7 of Questioning slavery ‘The Culture of Resistance’. Questioning slavery. London: Routledge; 1996.
112.
Geggus D. The Enigma of Jamaica in the 1790s: New Light on the Causes of Slave Rebellions. The William and Mary Quarterly. 1987 Apr;44(2).
113.
Sidbury J. Saint Domingue in Virginia: Ideology, Local Meanings, and Resistance to Slavery, 1790-1800. The Journal of Southern History. 1997 Aug;63(3).
114.
Berry DR. The price for their pound of flesh: the value of the enslaved from womb to grave in the building of a nation. Boston: Beacon Press; 2017.
115.
Rood DB. An International Harvest: The Second Slavery, the Virginia-Brazil Connection, and the Development of the McCormick Reaper. In: Beckert S, Rockman S, editors. Slavery’s capitalism: a new history of American economic development. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2016.
116.
Baptist E. 'Chapter 1: Toward a Political Economy of Slave Labor: Hands, Whipping-Machines, and Modern Power’. In: Beckert S, Rockman S, editors. Slavery’s capitalism: a new history of American economic development. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2016.
117.
Berry DR. ‘Chapter 6: "Broad is de Road dat Leads ter Death”: Human Capital and Enslaved Mortality’. In: Beckert S, Rockman S, editors. Slavery’s capitalism: a new history of American economic development. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2016.
118.
Beckert S. Empire of cotton: a global history. New York: Vintage Books; 2015.
119.
Baptist EE. The half has never been told: slavery and the making of American capitalism. New York: Basic Books; 2014.
120.
Nelson SR. Who Put Their Capitalism in My Slavery? The Journal of the Civil War Era. 2015;5(2):289–310.
121.
Daniel B. Rood. The Reinvention of Atlantic Slavery: Technology, Labor, Race, and Capitalism in the Greater Caribbean [Internet]. Oxford University Press; 2017. Available from: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Reinvention-Atlantic-Slavery-Technology-Capitalism-ebook/dp/B06ZYC7NXD/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1500896402&sr=8-1&keywords=The+Reinvention+of+Atlantic+Slavery%3A+Technology%2C+Labor%2C+Race%2C+and+Capitalism+in+the+Greater+Caribbean
122.
Manufacturing Social Class: Ceramic Entrepreneurs and Industrial Slavery in the Old Edgefield District. Available from: http://tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/21619441.2017.1345108
123.
Walvin J. Chapter 10 of Questioning slavery - available on Blackboard. Questioning slavery. London: Routledge; 1996.
124.
Rugemer EB. Chapter 8 of The Problem of Emancipation (Antislavery, Abolition, and the Atlantic World). The problem of emancipation: the Caribbean roots of the American Civil War. Baton Rouge, [La.]: Louisiana State University Press; 2009.
125.
Clayton N. Managing the Transition to a Free Labor Society: American Interpretations of the British West Indies during the Civil War and Reconstruction. American Nineteenth Century History. 2006 Mar;7(1):89–108.
126.
Otele O. Bristol, slavery and the politics of representation: the Slave Trade Gallery in the Bristol Museum. Social Semiotics. 2012 Apr;22(2):155–172.
127.
Seaton AV. Sources of Slavery-Destinations of Slavery. International Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Administration. 2001 Oct 23;2(3–4):107–129.
128.
Giovannetti JL. Subverting the Master’s Narrative: Public Histories of Slavery in Plantation America. International Labor and Working-Class History. 2009 Sep;76(01).
129.
Weiner MF. Sex, sickness, and slavery: illness in the antebellum South. Hough M, editor. Urbana: University of Illinois Press; 2014.
130.
Fett SM. Working cures: healing, health, and power on Southern slave plantations. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press; 2002.
131.
Pôrto Â. O sistema de saúde do escravo no Brasil do século XIX: doenças, instituições e práticas terapêuticas. História, Ciências, Saúde-Manguinhos. 2006 Dec;13(4):1019–1027.
132.
Cooper Owens DB. Medical bondage: race, gender, and the origins of American gynecology. Athens: The University of Georgia Press; 2017.
133.
Turner S. Slavery, Freedom, and Women’s Bodies. Journal of Women’s History. 2017;29(1):177–187.
134.
De Barros J, Palmer SP, Wright D. Health and medicine in the circum-Caribbean, 1800-1968. New York: Routledge; 2009.
135.
Hogarth RA. Medicalizing blackness: making racial differences in the Atlantic world, 1780-1840. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 2017.
136.
Schwartz MJ. Birthing a slave: motherhood and medicine in the antebellum South. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; 2009.
137.
Turner S. Contested bodies: pregnancy, childrearing, and slavery in Jamaica. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2017.
138.
Karl  Jacoby. Slaves by nature? Domestic animals and human slaves. Slavery and Abolition [Internet]. Taylor & Francis Group; 15(1). Available from: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01440399408575117
139.
Lambert D. Master–Horse–Slave: Mobility, Race and Power in the British West Indies, c.1780–1838. Slavery & Abolition. 2015 Oct 2;36(4):618–641.
140.
Browne RM. Surviving slavery in the British Caribbean. 1st edition. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2017.
141.
Desch-Obi MTJ. Fighting for honor: the history of African martial art traditions in the Atlantic world. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press; 2008.
142.
Follett RJ, Beckert S, Coclanis PA, Hahn B. Plantation kingdom: the American South and its global commodities. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; 2016.