#133: The Antebellum Feminine Mystique

Published: June 12, 2020, 4:01 a.m.

This week on our website, we unlocked an essay that appears in our new Summer issue: \u201cThe Patriot Slave,\u201d written by University of Virginia law professor Farah Peterson. In it, she explores the ways in which we\u2019re still haunted by the dangerous myth that African Americans chose not to be free in revolutionary America. Peterson will be joining us for an interview next week to talk about her essay and the recent Black Lives Matter protests. In preparation, let\u2019s revisit this episode from last year, in which the historian Stephanie Jones-Rogers revises another dangerous myth\u2014namely that wealthy white women in the South were separated from the ugly reality of slavery both by their own disenfranchisement and their intrinsic sweet nature. Since women often inherited more slaves than land, they were deeply invested, in a social, moral, and economic sense, in the trade of enslaved people. A white woman could cordon off her property from her husband\u2019s in a prenuptial agreement, preserve her right to manage her own property, and fend off her husband\u2019s debtors in court. She also ensured the continued reproduction of the institution by engaging in the market for wet nurses who were often coerced into serendipitous pregnancies through sexual violence, and whose breast milk was then used to nurse white children. How does the power of women slave owners change our understanding of the relationship among gender, slavery, and capitalism in the 19th century? Why were these relationships obscured for so long?


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