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Slavery on Trial: Race, Class, and Criminal Justice in Antebellum Richmond, Virginia
Campbell, James

Slavery on Trial: Race, Class, and Criminal Justice in Antebellum Richmond, Virginia

弗吉尼亚里士满的奴隶制审判:种族、阶级和刑事司法

ISBN
9780813035666
作者Author
Campbell, James
出版社Publisher
University Press of Florida
出版时间Published
2010-11
产品分类SIC
01020L030201-美国史
装帧Format
平装
语种Language
英文
页数Page
288
开本Size
20开
数量Qty
编辑推荐 | Editors' Choice
By the mid-nineteenth century, Richmond was one of the preeminent industrial centers in the South, with a level of criminal activity that reflected its size. Slavery on Trial examines more than 7,000 criminal cases recorded between 1830 and 1860, ranging from sensational murders to minor misdemeanors. Although the criminal justice system in antebellum Virginia was explicitly designed to support slaveholders' rule, James Campbell reveals that, in practice, trials and punishments sometimes subverted elite interests. Rather than serving as an unproblematic prop of the slave regime, law enforcement and court proceedings in Richmond revealed class, race, and gender tensions. Campbell shows that considerations of race and slavery infused every criminal case in Richmond, even when slaves were not directly involved as victims or defendants. He also considers the relationship between judicial processes and social, cultural, and political developments in the city. Slavery on Trial is a sobering portrait of the administration of racially constructed laws. It exposes the contradictions inherent in antebellum Southern law, and examines the implications those contradictions had for slaves, free blacks, poor whites, immigrants, and women.
前言 | Preface

<b>James M. Campbell</b> is a lecturer in American history at the University of Leicester.