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Colonial Slavery : An Abridged Translation.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Series: Decolonizing the ClassicsPublication details: [Place of publication not identified] : Routledge, 2022.Edition: First editionDescription: 1 online resource (320 pages)ISBN:
  • 9781003003090
  • 1003003095
  • 9781000538687
  • 1000538680
  • 9781000538601
  • 1000538605
Related works:
  • Translation of (work): Gorender, Jacob, 1923- Escravismo colonial. English
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 306.3620981
Online resources:
Contents:
Part 1: Fundamental Categories1. Colonial Slavery - An Historically New Mode of Production2. The Category of Slavery3. The Plantation Form of Organization of Slave ProductionPart 2: Genesis4. Portuguese Society and Overseas Expansion5. Original Sources of Slave Labor Force6. Aspects of the Establishment of Slave Plantations in BrazilPart 3: Specific Laws of the Colonial Slave Mode of Production7. Introduction8. Law of Money Income9. Law of the Initial Investment to Acquire the Slave10. Effects of the Law of Initial Investment to Acquire the Slave11. Laws of the Rigidity of the Slave Workforce12. Law of the Correlation between the Mercantile Economy and the Natural Economy in Slave Plantations13. Socioeconomic Dynamics and Historiography14. Categories Extraneous to the Concept of Colonial Slavery15. Dualism, Integrationism, and other Interpretations of History16. Law of the Slave Population17. Factors Opposed to the Growth of the Slave Population18. Territorial Regime in Slaveholding Brazil19. Industrial Slave Rent and Slave Ground RentBibliographic References
Summary: Jacob Gorender's (1922-2013) 1978 book, Colonial Slavery (O Escravismo Colonial), comes alive for English-language readers thanks to Bernd Reiter and Alejandro Reyes' brilliant translation. Gorender argued that slave-holding societies produced an economic system sui generis, not fitting into any of the established societal categories offered by Karl Marx and Max Weber. As such, Gorender proposed a theory of colonial slavery as the structuring force of slave-holding societies. For him, slave-holding societies are different from other societies in that slavery structured them differently. This is of the utmost relevance to this day as it allows for a new and different way to explain contemporary racial inequalities in post-slavery societies. An accomplished interpreter of Brazilian social formation, Gorender was motivated by the need to understand the historical roots of class domination and the emergence of Brazilian capitalist society. His presentation of rich historical data, rigorous theoretical and analytical framework, and militant action as an active member of the Brazilian Communist Party are the hallmarks of his writing. Colonial Slavery: An Abridged Translation is a must-read for researchers, teachers, and students of history, sociology, economics, politics, as well as activists of the Black movement and other movements committed to anti-racism.
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E-Books E-Books National Library of India Online Resource 306.3620981 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available EBK000029120ENG
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Part 1: Fundamental Categories1. Colonial Slavery - An Historically New Mode of Production2. The Category of Slavery3. The Plantation Form of Organization of Slave ProductionPart 2: Genesis4. Portuguese Society and Overseas Expansion5. Original Sources of Slave Labor Force6. Aspects of the Establishment of Slave Plantations in BrazilPart 3: Specific Laws of the Colonial Slave Mode of Production7. Introduction8. Law of Money Income9. Law of the Initial Investment to Acquire the Slave10. Effects of the Law of Initial Investment to Acquire the Slave11. Laws of the Rigidity of the Slave Workforce12. Law of the Correlation between the Mercantile Economy and the Natural Economy in Slave Plantations13. Socioeconomic Dynamics and Historiography14. Categories Extraneous to the Concept of Colonial Slavery15. Dualism, Integrationism, and other Interpretations of History16. Law of the Slave Population17. Factors Opposed to the Growth of the Slave Population18. Territorial Regime in Slaveholding Brazil19. Industrial Slave Rent and Slave Ground RentBibliographic References

Jacob Gorender's (1922-2013) 1978 book, Colonial Slavery (O Escravismo Colonial), comes alive for English-language readers thanks to Bernd Reiter and Alejandro Reyes' brilliant translation. Gorender argued that slave-holding societies produced an economic system sui generis, not fitting into any of the established societal categories offered by Karl Marx and Max Weber. As such, Gorender proposed a theory of colonial slavery as the structuring force of slave-holding societies. For him, slave-holding societies are different from other societies in that slavery structured them differently. This is of the utmost relevance to this day as it allows for a new and different way to explain contemporary racial inequalities in post-slavery societies. An accomplished interpreter of Brazilian social formation, Gorender was motivated by the need to understand the historical roots of class domination and the emergence of Brazilian capitalist society. His presentation of rich historical data, rigorous theoretical and analytical framework, and militant action as an active member of the Brazilian Communist Party are the hallmarks of his writing. Colonial Slavery: An Abridged Translation is a must-read for researchers, teachers, and students of history, sociology, economics, politics, as well as activists of the Black movement and other movements committed to anti-racism.

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