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Within the Plantation Household: Black and White Women of the Old South (1988)

por Elizabeth Fox-Genovese

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Discusses how class, race, and gender shaped women's experiences in the South.
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There’s an extraordinary amount of information in this book that was new to me regarding the specifics of plantation life. I highly recommend it for history buffs who want to gain a true and accurate understanding of what it was like. However, it bothered me how conflictual the author was about the topic. Generally, on the one hand, she well-described the utter brutality of “slave owning “ women towards their slaves but, on the other hand there was an implication of her sympathy for the women slaveowners. ( )
  joyfulmimi | Apr 28, 2023 |
Scholarly book that documents memories, thoughts, and feelings of plantation mistresses and slaves prior to the Civil War.
  MWMLibrary | Jan 14, 2022 |
An account of the lives of antebellum slave owning women and black slaves within the plantation household setting. Fox-Genovese uses primarily diaries and letters as her source material to recreate the women's' culture of this particular environment.

In the Prologue, she shows that elite white women are able to develop an identity because they had intense and uninterrupted familial ties and networks of friends to buoy them up in hard times (p. 11). Much of this identity, however, was dependant upon the support given them by their husbands. This is at least the case with Sarah Gayle (p. 12).

Slave-holding was a very important source of the sense of self for women like Sarah Gayle. Despite the close bonds which Sarah develops with Mike and Rose, two of her slaves (p. 26), the proximity of living conditions also led to friction, as was the case with Hampton (p. 23). Sarah Gayle benefited from the slave system. Likeable though she was, she was complicit in maintaining the slaveocracy (p. 27).

Suzanne Lebsock, "Complicity and Contention: Women in the Plantation South," Georgia Historical Quarterly, LXXIV (1990), 59-83; and reply by Elizabeth Fox-Genovese, pp. 369-371.

Lebsock finds untold contradictions in Fox-Genovese's logic. She finds her sources and scope all too limited for the conclusions drawn (p. 62). She dismisses her "theory of identity" for black women as ambiguous (p. 66). The biggest problem, though, is her simplistic thinking on where white slave-holding women stood on slavery (p. 73). She has subjected these poor women to an unreasonable test of "ideological purity" (p. 75), and as a result missed the nuanced moral struggle that people like Mary Chestnut had with the idea of slavery in favor of the "honorary man" Louisa McCord (p. 78). Women responded to slavery in a way that was different from men. That is true for both white and black women. Gender is a useful category, if one that needs to be employed with greater subtlety when class loyalties and race come into play.
  mdobe | Jul 24, 2011 |
Some of it took some serious slogging through sociology lingo and was pretty dull going, but it was interesting. ( )
  LilleesUncle | Jan 19, 2010 |
Excellent exploration and analysis from the primary sources. ( )
  heidilove | Dec 5, 2005 |
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Prologue:Sarah Haynesworth married John Gayle when she was still a girl—by her own lights a wild one—not quite sixteen.
Chapter 1: The temptation is strong to write the history of southern women from the discrete stories of Sarah Gayle and of the thousands who were both very much like her and, simultaneously, very much like no other women
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Discusses how class, race, and gender shaped women's experiences in the South.

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