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Not Even Past

Slavery and Race in Colonial Latin America

July 29, 2015

NEP has published numerous articles and book reviews on Slavery and Race in Colonial Latin America. What hierarchies conditioned the relations between Africans, Europeans, and native groups? How did these socio-racial systems work on the day to day of life in Colonial Latin America? And, how did racially discriminated groups resist? These are some of the key questions addressed in the articles below.

Slavery and its legacy in the USA

June 29, 2015

Not Even Past has published many feature articles, book and film reviews, and podcasts on slavery in the American South, brought together on this page. Approaching this topic from different angles, this body of work provides an overview of key issues important for anyone wanting to understand slavery and its lasting legacy.

#Blacklivesmatter Till They Don’t: Slavery’s Lasting Legacy

December 5, 2014

We are appalled by these deaths. But we are equally appalled by our ability to make sense of them. We live embedded in the afterlife of slavery. We are a nation that has failed to grapple with our past.

Slavery in America: Back in the Headlines

October 22, 2014

People think they know everything about slavery in the United States, but they don’t.

Andrew Cox Marshall: Between Slavery and Freedom in Savannah

October 15, 2014

By Tania Sammons This essay is reproduced from the book we are featuring this month, Slavery and Freedom in Savannah, edited by Daina Ramey Berry and Leslie Harris. If you would like to know more about the book and especially about the sidebars that feature short essays on interesting figures and events related to the […]

More to Read on Urban Slavery

October 1, 2014

The Urban world made by slaves in the US South and the Atlantic.

Slavery and Freedom in Savannah

October 1, 2014

Slavery and Freedom in Savannah

Savannah is a prime location for understanding the centrality of slavery and race to the national and world economy, and the importance of the city to southern landscapes and the southern economy.

Episode 54: Urban Slavery in the Antebellum U.S.

September 23, 2014

When most people think about slavery in the United States, they think of large agricultural plantations and picture slaves working in the fields harvesting crops. But for a significant number of slaves, their experience involved working in houses, factories, and on the docks of the South’s booming cities.  Urban slavery, as it has come to be […]

Episode 54: Urban Slavery in the Antebellum United States

September 16, 2014

15 Minute History

Daina Ramey Berry, from UT's Department of History, and Leslie Harris, from Emory University, have spent the past year collaborating on a new study aimed at re-discovering this forgotten aspect of slave experience in the United States.

Black Slaves, Indian Masters: Slavery, Emancipation, and Citizenship in the Native American South, by Barbara Krauthamer (2013)

March 26, 2014

by Nakia Parker For decades, scholars peered at the painful and complex topic of American slavery through a purely “black-white” lens—in other words, black slaves who had white masters.  The sad reality that some Native Americans, (in particular, the Creek, Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Seminole, or “the Five Tribes”) also participated in chattel and race-based […]

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