Mothering slaves: comparative perspectives on motherhood, childlessness, and the care of children in Atlantic slave societies vol. 38 (2): 223-231 |
Mothering slaves: comparative perspectives on motherhood, childlessness, and the care of children in Atlantic slave societies vol. 38 (2): 223-231 |
The nameless and the forgotten: maternal grief, sacred protection, and the archive of slavery vol. 38 (2): 232-250 |
The nameless and the forgotten: maternal grief, sacred protection, and the archive of slavery vol. 38 (2): 232-250 |
Maternal struggles and the politics of childlessness under pronatalist Caribbean slavery vol. 38 (2): 251-268 |
Maternal struggles and the politics of childlessness under pronatalist Caribbean slavery vol. 38 (2): 251-268 |
From free womb to criminalized woman: fertility control in Brazilian slavery and freedom vol. 38 (2): 269-286 |
From free womb to criminalized woman: fertility control in Brazilian slavery and freedom vol. 38 (2): 269-286 |
Bad breeders and monstrosities: racializing childlessness and congenital disabilities in slavery and freedom vol. 38 (2): 287-302 |
Bad breeders and monstrosities: racializing childlessness and congenital disabilities in slavery and freedom vol. 38 (2): 287-302 |
The enslaved wet nurse as nanny: the transition from free to slave labor in childcare in Barcelona after the Black Death (1348) vol. 38 (2): 303-319 |
The enslaved wet nurse as nanny: the transition from free to slave labor in childcare in Barcelona after the Black Death (1348) vol. 38 (2): 303-319 |
Between two Beneditos: enslaved wet-nurses amid slavery’s decline in southeast Brazil vol. 38 (2): 320-336 |
Between two Beneditos: enslaved wet-nurses amid slavery’s decline in southeast Brazil vol. 38 (2): 320-336 |
‘[S]he could … spare one ample breast for the profit of her owner’: white mothers and enslaved wet nurses’ invisible labor in American slave markets vol. 38 (2): 337-355 |
‘[S]he could … spare one ample breast for the profit of her owner’: white mothers and enslaved wet nurses’ invisible labor in American slave markets vol. 38 (2): 337-355 |
‘By her unnatural and despicable conduct’: motherhood and concubinage in the Watchman and Jamaica Free Press, 1830–1833 vol. 38 (2): 356-372 |
‘By her unnatural and despicable conduct’: motherhood and concubinage in the Watchman and Jamaica Free Press, 1830–1833 vol. 38 (2): 356-372 |
Conceived in violence: enslaved mothers and children born of rape in nineteenth-century Louisiana vol. 38 (2): 373-391 |
Conceived in violence: enslaved mothers and children born of rape in nineteenth-century Louisiana vol. 38 (2): 373-391 |
US slavery, civil war, and the emancipation of enslaved mothers vol. 38 (2): 392-407 |
US slavery, civil war, and the emancipation of enslaved mothers vol. 38 (2): 392-407 |
Bad mothers, labouring children: emancipation, tutelage and motherhood in São Paulo in the last decades of the nineteenth century vol. 38 (2): 408-424 |
Bad mothers, labouring children: emancipation, tutelage and motherhood in São Paulo in the last decades of the nineteenth century vol. 38 (2): 408-424 |
In pursuit of autonomous womanhood: nineteenth-century black motherhood in the U.S. North vol. 38 (2): 425-440 |
In pursuit of autonomous womanhood: nineteenth-century black motherhood in the U.S. North vol. 38 (2): 425-440 |