Livestock, Sugar and Slavery: Contested Terrain in Colonial Jamaica – Hardback Version

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Devoted primarily to the slavery era, the book examines the evolution and expansion of the pen-keeping industry, the role and status of the pen-keepers and the experiences of enslaved labourers on pens.

By: Verene A. Sheperd

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Also available in Paperback

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Description

The economic and social history of Jamaica has been dominated by a tradition of scholarship that has tended to focus on the study of the ruling sugar planter elite – the ‘sugarocracy’- considered more socially significant than non-sugar producers. Indeed, non-sugar producers. Indeed, non-sugar producing units have been regarded as representing a ‘divergent pattern’ of social and economic development. Livestock, Sugar and Slavery broadens the economic and social history of Jamaica by turning the spotlight on those involved in raising livestock rather than sugar cane in colonial Jamaica.

Devoted primarily to the slavery era, the book examines the evolution and expansion of the pen-keeping industry, the role and status of the pen-keepers and the experiences of enslaved labourers on pens. Above all, the book argues that the relationship between those who raised livestock and those who raised sugar cane, while symbiotic in one sense, was also conflict-ridden in another. Pens, though emerging in the pre-sugar era when they had an independent economic dynamic, had developed into virtual adjuncts of the sugar industry by the 18th and 19th centuries, leading to contests between sugar proprietors and pen-keepers over land, boundaries, enslaved labourers, and social and political status. This comparative study of pen-keepers and sugar planters also demonstrates that the ‘ranking game’ was intensely practised in the age of modernity.

Additional information

Weight 3 lbs
Dimensions 9 × 6 in
ISBN

978-976-637-403-7

Binding

Paperback

Page Count

320

Publication date

2009

About the Author

Verene A. Sheperd is a Professor of Social History at the University of the West Indies, Mona, Jamaica. She is the author of I Want to Disturb My Neighbour: Lectures on Slavery, Emancipation and Postcolonial Jamaica (Ian Randle Publishers, 2007), Mahrani’s Misery: Narratives of a Passage from India to the Caribbean (The Press, UWI, 2002) and Transients to Settlers: The Experience of Indians in Jamaica, 1845-1950 (Peepal Tree/Warwick, 1994). She has edited several publications including Slavery without Sugar: Diversity in Caribbean Economy and Society Since the 17th Century (University Press of Florida, 2003) and Working Slavery, Pricing Freedom: Perspectives from the Caribbean, Africa and the African Diaspora (Ian Randle Publishers, 2002). She is President of the Association of Caribbean Historians, Steering Committee Member of the South-South Exchange Programme for Research on the History of Development (SEPHIS) and in 2007, chaired the Jamaica National Bicentenary Committee.

Contents

List of Figures and Tables

Foreword

Preface

Introduction

Conventions and Abbreviations

  1. Raising Livestock in the Pre-Plantation Era
  2. The Interplay of Livestock and Cane: Contests over Land for Commodity Production
  3. Trade and Exchange: Contesting the Classic Plantation Trading Arrangement
  4. The Pen-Keepers Emergence, Demographic Profile and Economic Status
  5. The Pen-Keepers: Socio-Political Status, Ideology, Relationships and the ‘Ranking Game’
  6. The Enslaved on Pens: Demographic Profile and Work Culture 
  7. Contesting Slavery: Negotiations for Freedom in the Slave System
  8. Post-Slavery Adjustments

Conclusion

Notes

Bibliography

Index

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