Enslaved New World
Slavery, Freedom, and the Making of Race in Santo Domingo
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:30th Apr '26
£32.00
This title is due to be published on 30th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

A new history of Santo Domingo, the Americas' first plantation and post-plantation society, focused on its African-descended majority.
This book tells little-known histories of Santo Domingo as the Americas' first plantation society and a land where widespread escape by the enslaved produced a majority free Black population long before abolition. It will appeal to students and scholars interested in slavery, race, the Caribbean, and the African Diaspora.Enslaved New World illuminates sixteenth-century Santo Domingo as the site of the Americas' earliest plantation and slave society and the first place where slavery became limited to people of African descent. Yet Santo Domingo was also home, Turits shows, to widespread continual flight from bondage and an ecology providing escapees with relatively easy refuge. This transformed the colony into a land in which predominantly self-emancipated Black people became the largest population group by the late seventeenth century, 150 years before slavery's abolition. Afterwards, slavery and legal racial hierarchy persisted, but the White elite often remained too poor and weak to overcome resistance and competing constructs of status and color emerged. By focusing on Santo Domingo's understudied African-descended majority population within novel frameworks, Turits opens up new understandings of Dominican history, slavery's racialization, race and racism's historical contingency, and an extraordinarily successful Afro-American trajectory of resistance.
ISBN: 9781009721455
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 250g
375 pages