How America's First Settlers Invented Chattel Slavery; Dehumanizing Native Americans and Africans with Language, Laws, Guns, and Religion

How America's First Settlers Invented Chattel Slavery; Dehumanizing Native Americans and Africans with Language, Laws, Guns, and Religion - Berkeley Insights in Linguistics and Semiotics

Hardback (01 Nov 2004)

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Publisher's Synopsis

From New England and Virginia to New Spain and the current Southwest, North America's founding householders - English and Spanish alike - took the limited European practice of coerced labor and, over the course of two hundred years, transformed it into a depersonalized and brutal chattel slavery unlike anything that had existed in Europe. What system of language and logic, what visions of religious and civil society, allowed men who saw themselves both as Christians and cultured humanists to dehumanize and enslave people whose cultures and accomplishments were evident to nearly all? In this book we observe the progressive development of a mindset that allowed the settlers to see both Native Americans and Africans as others who did not merit human status.

Book information

ISBN: 9780820468143
Publisher: Lang, Peter, Publishing Inc.
Imprint: Peter Lang
Pub date:
DEWEY: 973.0496073
DEWEY edition: 21
Language: English
Number of pages: 210
Weight: 420g
Height: 158mm
Width: 232mm
Spine width: 17mm