Home Literary Studies Chapter 12. Testamentary manumission and emotional bonds in eighteenth-century Saint-Domingue
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Chapter 12. Testamentary manumission and emotional bonds in eighteenth-century Saint-Domingue

  • Jennifer L. Palmer
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Abstract

Plantation slavery brought whites and people of color into constant intimate contact in a system of intense forcible domination and subordination. This generated powerful emotions on the part of both enslavers and the enslaved. A close reading of one testament from eighteenth-century French Saint-Domingue suggests that systems of enslavement prompted a range of emotions on the part of white slave owners. While the emotional responses of the enslaved are much more difficult to identify, this example suggests that emotions played a key role in leading to or discouraging manumission. Why else would the wealthy, childless widow Marie-Magdeleine Rossignol manumit nine enslaved people in her will?

Abstract

Plantation slavery brought whites and people of color into constant intimate contact in a system of intense forcible domination and subordination. This generated powerful emotions on the part of both enslavers and the enslaved. A close reading of one testament from eighteenth-century French Saint-Domingue suggests that systems of enslavement prompted a range of emotions on the part of white slave owners. While the emotional responses of the enslaved are much more difficult to identify, this example suggests that emotions played a key role in leading to or discouraging manumission. Why else would the wealthy, childless widow Marie-Magdeleine Rossignol manumit nine enslaved people in her will?

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