Antebellum Louisiana, 1830-1860: Life and labor
Author: Carolyn E. DeLatte
Publisher: Louisiana Purchase Bicentennia
Published: 2004
Total Pages: 602
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEssays on social and technological expansion in Louisiana.
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Author: Carolyn E. DeLatte
Publisher: Louisiana Purchase Bicentennia
Published: 2004
Total Pages: 602
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEssays on social and technological expansion in Louisiana.
Author: Carolyn E. DeLatte
Publisher: Louisiana Purchase Bicentennia
Published: 2004
Total Pages: 434
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEssays on political development in Louisiana.
Author: Jack Lawrence Schermerhorn
Publisher: Yale University Press
Published: 2015-04-28
Total Pages: 351
ISBN-13: 0300213891
DOWNLOAD EBOOKCalvin Schermerhorn’s provocative study views the development of modern American capitalism through the window of the nineteenth-century interstate slave trade. This eye-opening history follows money and ships as well as enslaved human beings to demonstrate how slavery was a national business supported by far-flung monetary and credit systems reaching across the Atlantic Ocean. The author details the anatomy of slave supply chains and the chains of credit and commodities that intersected with them in virtually every corner of the pre–Civil War United States, and explores how an institution that destroyed lives and families contributed greatly to the growth of the expanding republic’s capitalist economy.
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1902
Total Pages: 422
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: University of Southwestern Louisiana. Center for Louisiana Studies
Publisher:
Published: 2006
Total Pages: 768
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: University of Southwestern Louisiana. Center for Louisiana Studies
Publisher:
Published: 2005
Total Pages: 680
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: William Boelhower
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2013-09-13
Total Pages: 260
ISBN-13: 1317988442
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe thematic project ‘New Orleans in the Atlantic World’ was planned immediately after hurricane Katrina and focuses on what meteorologists have always known: the city’s identity and destiny belong to the broader Caribbean and Atlantic worlds as perhaps no other American city does. Balanced precariously between land and sea, the city’s geohistory has always interwoven diverse cultures, languages, peoples, and economies. Only with the rise of the new Atlantic Studies matrix, however, have scholars been able to fully appreciate this complex history from a multi-disciplinary, multilingual and multi-scaled perspectivism. In this book, historians, geographers, anthropologists, and cultural studies scholars bring to light the atlanticist vocation of New Orleans, and in doing so they also help to define the new field of Atlantic Studies. This book was published as a special issue of Atlantic Studies.
Author: Susan Tucker
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Published: 2009
Total Pages: 277
ISBN-13: 1604736453
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWith contributions from Karen Leathem, Patricia Kennedy Livingston, Michael Mizell-Nelson, Cynthia LeJeune Nobles, Sharon Stallworth Nossiter, Sara Roahen, and Susan Tucker New Orleans Cuisine: Fourteen Signature Dishes and Their HistoriesNew Orleans Cuisine shows how ingredients, ethnicities, cooks, chefs, and consumers all converged over time to make the city a culinary capital.
Author: Catherine Clinton
Publisher: Pantheon
Published: 1984-02-12
Total Pages: 353
ISBN-13: 0394722531
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis pioneering study of the much-mythologized Southern belle offers the first serious look at the lives of white women and their harsh and restricted place in the slave society before the Civil War. Drawing on the diaries, letters, and memoirs of hundreds of planter wives and daughters, Clinton sets before us in vivid detail the daily life of the plantation mistress and her ambiguous intermediary position in the hierarchy between slave and master. "The Plantation Mistress challenges and reinterprets a host of issues related to the Old South. The result is a book that forces us to rethink some of our basic assumptions about two peculiar institutions -- the slave plantation and the nineteenth-century family. It approaches a familiar subject from a new angle, and as a result, permanently alters our understanding of the Old South and women's place in it.
Author: Samuel Claude Shepherd
Publisher:
Published: 2005
Total Pages: 680
ISBN-13:
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