File(s) not publicly available
‘Lives of living death’: The reproductive lives of slave women in the cane world of Louisiana
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-08, 06:32 authored by Richard FollettThis paper examines the seasonality of childbirth among slave women and addresses the relationship between seasonal workloads, nutrition, and pregnancy on large sugar plantations in nineteenth-century Louisiana. Unlike the rest of the American South, where the slave population grew, bondspeople in southern Louisiana experienced natural population decrease. This derived in part from imbalanced sex ratios, but as this article shows, conceptions peaked during the annual harvest season but fell away at other times due to nutritional stress, overwork, heat, and exhaustion. By combining plantation sources with contemporary scholarship on reproductive physiology, the article places Louisiana's reproductive history in contest and establishes the limits sugar production imposed on the slave women's capacity for childbirth.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Slavery and AbolitionISSN
0144-039XPublisher
Taylor & FrancisExternal DOI
Issue
2Volume
26Page range
289-304Pages
16.0Department affiliated with
- American Studies Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes