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The Antislavery Movement in Early America: Religion, Social Environment and Slave Manumissions
Ist Teil von
Social forces, 2005-12, Vol.84 (2), p.941-966
Ort / Verlag
Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press
Erscheinungsjahr
2005
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Although traditional explanations of the historic slave manumission movement during the early Republic have stressed religion, rival ones have emphasized broader environmental forces. However, the literature has offered non-systematic conceptualizations of religion and impressionistic empirical analyses of the facilitators of liberations. In response, I examine the Methodist church's efforts to convince the faithful to free their slaves in Brunswick County, Virginia, from 1782 to 1808. Analyzing the entire population of freedom documents, I report that evangelical ideology motivated masters to make the initial decision to release chattels and that Methodist organizational and social environmental factors influenced masters' decisions regarding when manumissions were written, how many slaves were freed, and whether willed or deeded liberations were awarded. Masters' traits also influenced when willed (moderate) and deeded (radical) manumissions were issued. I end by discussing the role played by economic self-interest in masters decisions to free bondspeople.