Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 226
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-2938-0 • Hardback • December 2003 • $130.00 • (£100.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-0-7425-2939-7 • Paperback • November 2003 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
978-1-4175-0357-5 • eBook • October 2004 • $47.00 • (£36.00)
Dale W. Tomich is professor of sociology and history at Binghamton University.
Part I: Slavery in the World Economy
Chapter 1: Capitalism, Slavery, and World Economy: Historical Theory and Theoretical History
Chapter 2: World of Capital, Worlds of Labor: A Global Perspective
Chapter 3: The "Second Slavery": Bonded Labor and the Transformation of the Nineteenth-Century World Economy
Part II: The Global in the Local
Chapter 4: World Slavery and Caribbean Capitalism: The Cuban Sugar Industry, 1760-1868
Chapter 5: Spaces of Slavery: Times of Freedom—Rethinking Caribbean History in World Perspective
Chapter 6: Small Islands and Huge Comparisons: Caribbean Plantations, Historical Unevenness, and Capitalist Modernity
Part III: Work, Time, and Resistance: Shifting the Terms of Confrontation
Chapter 7: White Days, Black Days: The Working Day and the Crisis of Slavery in the French Caribbean
Chapter 8: Une Petite Guinée: Provision Ground and Plantation in Martinique—Integration, Adaptation, and Appropriation
Chapter 9: Contested Terrains: Houses, Provision Grounds, and the Reconstitution of Labor in Postemancipation Martinique
The thoughtful essays in this volume address the large-scale relationships of slavery and early modern capitalism.
— David Northrup, Boston College; American Historical Review
Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
Tomich's approach proves very fruitful. . . . Historical and comparative sociologists of all specializations will do well to come to terms with the many methodological and theoretical insights that Tomich offers throughout the book. . . . [Makes] outstanding contributions to historical sociology.
— American Journal of Sociology
I commend the author for a well written and clearly organized text. . . . Tomich makes the reader rethink the totality of the relations of capital as presented by Marx.
— Contemporary Sociology
Not only a stimulating and rich use of the Atlantic history framework, but a muscular defense of the validity, even the necessity, of world history as a serious methodological project that can begin to breach [the] theoretical void. . . . Tomich brings a rigourous and exacting focus to the capitalism and slavery debate with particular attention to the role of the Caribbean as a test case for the uneven historical trajectory of modernity. . . . The essays . . . make a compelling case for using a world history framework that should be read not only by Atlanticists, but by any modern historian. . . . For students of international economy, Tomich's work provides a historical context for current inequalities and development trajectories, and actively challenges any two-dimensional view of the world.
— Itinerario
A provocatively illuminating book. This work opens new windows into the wider frameworks within which New World Slavery might be placed and better understood.
— David Barry Gaspar, Duke University
Offers a world-systems perspective
Presents a fresh exploration of the two-way dynamic between local slave regimes and world economic developments