Cooking for the Quarters
Enslaved Women and the Labor of Care in the Antebellum South
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Jul '26
£28.00
This title is due to be published on 31st July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

A compelling look at the work of enslaved women forced to prepare food for the enslaved, rather than enslavers.
This book illuminates the work of enslaved women forced to prepare food for the enslaved, revealing how the regimentation of this task informed wider systems of punishment and incentives. It will enlighten students and scholars interested in American history, African American history, and women and gender studies.Women who prepared food for enslaved people, rather than enslavers, have been neglected in historical scholarship. Their labor within the quarters has been marginalized, belittled, and even ignored, because it fell within the remit of gendered care and nurture. In this book, Emily West illustrates how these mostly older women performed vital roles in slaveholding sites, as their enslavers increasingly tried to regulate food distribution, preparation, and consumption. Enslavers attempted to impose highly efficient, communal food regimes to minimize waste and time lost from work elsewhere. They routinely tasked older women with the feeding and care of infants, but also deployed them to prepare food for children and enslaved adults to eat collectively. Conversely, in the relative privacy of the quarters, where enslaved people preferred to eat, cooking became both a form of gendered exploitation, and an expression of love, empowerment, and pleasure.
ISBN: 9781009544375
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 436g
323 pages