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Concluding Thoughts: Boundary Crossings: Slavery and Freedom, Legality and Illegality, Past and Present
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2016
Extract
This symposium issue is first and foremost about crossing boundaries. The people readers have met in these pages—enslavers and enslaved, traders and purchasers, abolitionists and insurrectionaries—were mobile, and their mobility had consequences. The slave traders who changed flags as they moved across international waters are only the most visible exemplars of this phenomenon. Crossing geographic borders often meant crossing boundaries of race and status as well. All of these articles in one form or another address the question of what it means to cross lines: between “slave” and “free,” “legal” and “illegal,” “past” and “present.”
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Footnotes
References
1. Archivo Nacional de Cuba (hereafter ANC), Protocolos Notariales de la Habana, Escribania Fornari, 1694, fol. 257.
2. Contract of Tiocou with Director of Hospital, July 15, 1737, Records of the Superior Court of Louisiana, reprinted in Louisiana Historical Quarterly 4 (1921): 366–68.
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12. De La Fuente, Alejandro, “Slaves and The Creation of Legal Rights in Cuba: Coartaçion and Papel ,” Hispanic American Historical Review 87 (2007): 659, 670–73Google Scholar.
13. Wong, Edlie L., Neither Fugitive Nor Free: Atlantic Slavery, Freedom Suits, and The Legal Culture of Travel (New York: NYU Press, 2009)Google Scholar.
14. Beatriz Mamigonian, “Buried in Silence”? Illegally Enslaved Africans in the Debate on Brazilian Slavery in the Nineteenth Century, delivered at the American Historical Association Annual Meeting, New York City, January 2–5, 2009.
15. Transatlantic Slave Trade Database http://www.slavevoyages.org/voyage/search
16. Barbosa, Leonardo, “Behind The Definition of Contemporary Slavery in Brazil; Cristiano Paixão and Leonardo Barbosa, Perspectives on Human Dignity (On Judicial Rulings Regarding Contemporary Slavery in Brazil),” Quaderni Fiorentini 44 (2015): 1167–84Google Scholar.
17. Bales, Kevin, Disposable People (University of California Press, Berkeley, 1999), 28Google Scholar.
18. Oshinsky, David M., Worse Than Slavery: Parchman Farm and The Ordeal of Jim Crow (Simon and Schuster, New York City, 1997)Google Scholar; and Blackmon, Douglas A., Slavery By Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II (Knopf Doubleday Publishing, New York City, 2009)Google Scholar.
19. Oshinsky, Worse Than Slavery; and Blackmon, Slavery By Another Name.
20. See Sugrue, Thomas J., Not Even Past: Barack Obama and The Burden of Race (Princeton: Princeton University Press, New York City, 2010)Google Scholar.
21. See Martinez, Jenny S., The Slave Trade and The Origins of International Human Rights Law (Oxford University Press, New York City, 2012)Google Scholar; and Surwillo, Lisa, Monsters By Trade: Slave Traders in Modern Spanish Literature and Culture (Stanford: Stanford University Press, New York City, 2014)Google Scholar.
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