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Slavery & Abolition
A Journal of Slave and Post-Slave Studies
Volume 27, 2006 - Issue 3
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Miscellany

SLAVERY: ANNUAL BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SUPPLEMENT (2005)

Pages 415-512 | Published online: 11 Dec 2006
 

Notes

∗The elements of this bibliography appeared first as Joseph C. Miller, Slavery: A Comparative Teaching Bibliography (Waltham MA: Crossroads Press, 1977) and then in annual installments in Slavery and Abolition (London and Portland OR: Frank Cass, vol. 1 = 1980). Materials accumulated through the 1983 supplement appeared in Joseph C. Miller, Slavery: A Worldwide Bibliography, 1900–1982 (White Plains NY: Kraus International, 1985). The full 1983 supplement (with Larissa V. Brown) appeared in Slavery and Abolition, 4, 2 (1983), pp. 163–208 (Part I), and 4, 3 (1983), pp. 232–74 (Part II). “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1984)” and “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1985)” (both with James V. Skalnik), and “Slavery: Current Bibliographical Supplement (1986)” and “Slavery: Current Bibliographical Supplement (1987)” (both with David F. Appleby) appeared in Slavery and Abolition, 6, 1 (1985), pp. 59–92; 7, 3 (1986), pp. 315–88; 8, 3 (1987), pp. 353–86; and 9, 2 (1988), pp. 207–45. “Slavery: Current Bibliographical Supplement (1988)” (with Randolph C. Head) is in 10, 2 (1988), pp. 231–71, “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1989)” (with Jena R. Gaines) is in 11, 2 (1990), pp. 251–308, and “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1990)” and “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1991)” (both with Randolph C. Head) are in 12, 3 (1991), pp. 259–312, and 13, 3 (1992), pp. 244–315.

All materials compiled since 1983 (through 1991) were corrected and consolidated during 1992 in a new single-volume indexed bibliography (10,351 entries), published as Slavery and Slaving in World History: A Bibliography, 1900–1991 (Millwood NY: Kraus International, 1993).

The series of yearly updates resumed with “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1992)” in Slavery and Abolition, 14, 3 (1993), pp. 264–304 (with Emlyn Eisenach), and has continued to date as “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1993),” Slavery and Abolition, 15, 3 (1994), pp. 134–97, “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1994),” Slavery and Abolition, 16, 3 (1995), pp. 398–460, and “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1995),” Slavery and Abolition, 17, 3 (1996), pp. 270–339 (all with Janis M. Gibbs); “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1996),” Slavery and Abolition, 18, 3 (1997), pp. 312–66, “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1997),” Slavery and Abolition, 19, 3 (1998), pp. 169–236, and “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (1998),” Slavery and Abolition, 20, 3 (1999v), pp. 169–236 (all with John R. Holloran); “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (2000),” Slavery and Abolition, 22, 3 (2001), pp. 174–268 (with Roderick H. Martin); “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (2001),” Slavery and Abolition, 23, 3 (2002), pp. 167–318 (with Thomas E. Ridenhour, Jr.); “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (2002),” Slavery and Abolition, 24, 3 (2003), pp. 148–240, and “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (2003),” Slavery and Abolition, 25, 3 (2004), pp. 144–215 (both with Fred K. Drogula); and “Slavery: Annual Bibliographical Supplement (2004),” Slavery and Abolition, 26, 3 (2005), pp. 421–516 (Thomas Thurston and Joseph C. Miller).

Slavery and Slaving in World History was republished (with corrections) in 1998 by M. E. Sharpe, together with a second volume consolidating and indexing the 3897 entries compiled between 1992 and 1996.

The entire collection of entries is now being prepared for internet posting at the Virginia Center for Digital History (University of Virginia), with the support of the Gilder-Lehrman Institute and the College and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of the University of Virginia. Current materials will continue to appear in Slavery and Abolition.

For relevant presentations see Agamba, Lovejoy, Nunley, and Yelvington.

For relevant presentations see Bissa, Laqua, Rivas, Roth, Sandeman, Schiller, Shirley, and Washbrook.

For contents see Banks, Kamoie, Nash, Reese, and Vries.

For presentations see Ares, Barthélemy, Benot, Boidin, Bonniol and Régent, Bono, Botte, Cotta, Dakhlia, Del Carmen Barcia, Denoix, Garavaglia, Lahon, Langue, Meouak, Montes, Morabito, Paiva, Rey, Scardigli, Stella, Zoungbo, and ZuÒiga.

For relevant presentations see Costa, Guasco, Le Glaunec, Pybus, Schockett, and Thornton and Heywood.

For relevant presentations see Adjaye, Adolfo, Akinyemi, Aljoe, Angola, Bailey, Bilbao, Branche, Chinea, Dias, Donovan, Dossar, Dutra, Farfan, Huelett, León, Lewis, Lightfoot, Mamigonian, Metcalf, Minto, Nikoi, Orum, Pereira da Rocha, Reid, Rodrigues, Santiago-Valles, Sikainga, Stark, Thompson, and Welch.

For presentations see Annequin, Clarence-Smith (2), Emmer (2), Gonzales (2), Pétré-Grenouilleau, Popovic, and Tardieu.

For relevant presentations see Addoun, Araujo, Candido, Curto, and Rolingher.

For contents see Berlin, Dubois, Fick, Reis, Schmidt-Nowara, Soares, Tomich, and Zeuske.

For relevant contents see Braga-Pinto, Holgersson-Shorter, Isfahani-Hammond (2), and Kaussen.

For contents see Eltis, Klooster, and Lovejoy.

For presentations see Brown, Christopher, Fernandes-Dias, Gaynor, Landford, Manning, Maxwell-Stewart, Read, Teelucksingh, and Winn.

For relevant presentations see Alencastro, Berlin, Chalhoub, Dubois, Fuente, Jones, Lara, Reis, Santos, Scott, and Zeuske.

For contents see Fountain, Libby, and Walters.

For presentations see Addoun, Araujo, Asl, Badejo, Boudreault, Candido, Carmignani, Curto, Des Rosiers, Godonou, Grandío Moráguez, Hunt, Lanthier, Liberato, Lovejoy, Ojo, Salau, Semley, Thebaudeau, Vencatachellum, and Wilson-Fall.

Review of Basker's Amazing Grace.

Review of Wood's Slavery, Empathy and Pornography, Burnard's Mastery, Tyranny, and Desire: Thomas Thistlewood and His Slaves in the Anglo-Jamaica World, Mason's Social Death and Resurrection: Slavery and Emancipation in South Africa, and Himid's “Naming the Money, An Exhibition at the Hatton Gallery.”

For relevant presentations see Bernier, Fernandez-Armesto, Kelly, and Sweet.

For contents see Abreu, Boa, Brereton, Faulkner, Kittleson, Klein and Roberts, Newton, Paton, Paton and Scully, Peabody, Rodríguez-Silva, Rosen, Scully, Sheller, Steedman, and Zeuske.

For relevant presentations see Barr, Blumenthal, Davis, Fay, McKee, Powell, Robinson-Dunn, and Zilfi.

For relevant presentations see Allen, Beckles, Blakely, Dragtenstei, Heyer, Hondius, Horton, Joosse, Knight, Landers, Moitt, Parmentier, Roos, Thompson, Van Loo, Van Stipriaan, Wekker, and Zeuske.

For contents see Bohls and Rosenthal.

Translation, by Marisa Rocha Motta, of Thornton's Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World, 1400–1680 (1992).

For relevant presentations see Burness, Caldeira, Campos, Ceita, Covane, Ferreira, Henriques, Hernaes, Maestri, Mea, Mendes, Osswald, Papali, Reis, Ribeiro, Rocha, Santana, Santos, and Silva.

For relevant presentations see Alonso-Breto, Krus, Lebdai, and Otele.

For presentations see Blickle, Diederich, Elsenhans, Faroqhi, Kabadayi, McKee, Mensching, Nehlsen, Northrup, Rainer, Roy, Spoerer, Von der Linden, and Willms.

For contents see Allen, Benoist, Carter, Cauna, Chaudenson, Desportes, Eve, Fuma, Garnier, Goldenberg, Hazael-Massieux, Mas, Nicaise, Poirier, Rajaonah, Rantoandro, Wanquet, and Weber.

A collection of papers from three conferences: “L'héritage de l'esclavage et de l'émancipation en Europe et Amérique” (Guadeloupe, 9–11 March 2001); “L'héritage de la colonisation et de la décolonisation en Europe et en Amérique” (Paris, 22–23 June 2001); and “Les politiques et les pratiques d'intégration en Europe et en Amérique” (Middlebury, 1–2 March 2002).

For contents see Arnold, Baade, Burnham, Bush, Cottrol, Davis, Diamond, Fede, Gates, Gross, Harris, Kolchin, Morris, Phillips, Richards, Russell, Schafer, Schroeder, Tushnet, Watson, and Westen.

For contents see Allen, America, Darity, Darity and Frank, Foner, and Stewart.

For contents see Fehrenbacher, Morel, Oates, and Silverman.

The associated web site can be found at http://www.inmotionaame.org/home.cfm.

For contents see Bolton, Egerton, Hudson, and Stewart.

For contents see Leiber, O'Brien, and Vorenberg.

Review of Slavery and the Making of America.

Reprint of the 1872 edition.

Collected documents, edited and with an introduction by James Tackach, 14–37.

Volume 28 of the Annual Proceedings of the Dublin Seminar for New England Folklife, 2003.

For contents see Berlin and Harris, Bernstein, Hodges, Lepore, Moore, Peterson, Quigley, Rael, Sinha, White, and Wilder.

A lecture, available on audiotape, presented at the Historic Deerfield Guides Training Program, Deerfield, Mass., 10 March, 2005 Deerfield, MA.

A reprint of the 1883 edition with an introduction by Christopher Densmore.

Review of Berlin's Generations of Captivity, Harvey and O'Brien's George Washington's South, and Parent's Foul Means: The Formation of a Slave Society in Virginia, 1660–1740.

Review of Hadden's Slave Patrols: Law and Violence in Virginia and the Carolinas, Isaac's Landon Carter's Uneasy Kingdom: Revolution and Rebellion on a Virginia Plantation, and Snyder's Brabbling Women: Disorderly Speech and the Law in Early Virginia.

For contents see Cannon, Fox, Herrin, and Reed.

Reprint of the 1842 edition.

For relevant presentations see Adler/Merle/Wills, Carney, Herman, Littlefield, Metz, Opala, and Shields.

Reprint of the 1857 edition, with an introduction by Paul Dennis Sporer.

Reprint of the 1855 edition.

Reprint of the 1827 edition.

Previously published under the title U.S. Federal Census Index: Texas 1860 Slave Schedules.

DVD. 78 minutes.

Reprint of the 1849 edition, with an introduction by Lucius C. Matlack.

Reprint of the 1845 edition, with an introduction by Peter J. Gomes and a new afterword by Gregory Stephens.

Introduction by Régine Mfoumou-Arthur.

Reprint of the 1868 edition, with an introduction by William L. Andrews.

Reprint of the 1843 edition.

For relevant contents see Borja Medina, Gareis, Marzal, Negro, and Tardieu.

For contents see Carroll, Castillo Palma, Landers, Lane, Lutz and Restall, Restall, Schwartz and Langfur, Vinson and Restall, and Whitehead.

Reprint of the 1871 edition.

For contents see Ianni, Maestri, Reis, Ruy, and Sampaio.

For presentations see Araujo, Assis, Cairus, Cunha, and Francisco and Castro.

For relevant presentations see Constante, Cunha, Martinez, Martins, Miranda, Monsma, Schleumer, Scott, and Teixeira.

Individual papers are available online at http://www.fflch.usp.br/dh/anpuhsp/downloads/CD%20XVII/STXIX.html.

For contents see Cavalcanti, Engemann, Ferreira, Florentino, Florentino and Góes, Florentino and Machado, Mamigonian, Rodrigues, Sampaio, and Soares.

Translated from the Portuguese by Amy Chazkel and Junia Claudia Zaidan.

Reprint of the 1845 edition.

Reprint of the 1828 edition with a new introduction by Karina Williamson.

For relevant presentations see Lafleur, Mignot, and Richard.

For presentations see Barthelemy, Benot, Blancpain, Crouin, Fisher-Blanchet, Gautier, Geggus, Gewecke, Gliech, Hector, Hoffmann, Kleine, König, Lara, Maeseneer, Maurouard, Moise, Nicolas, Phaf-Rheinberger, Redouane, and Schmidt.

For contents see Jenson, Kadish, Miller, and Nesbitt.

Translation of Lamur's “The Impact of Maroon Wars on Population Policy during Slavery in Suriname,” Journal of Caribbean History, 23, 1 (1989).

5. Ethiopia

For contents see Beckerleg, Bulcha, Diallo, Gnammankou, Laya, Mihanjo, Nyaba, Ould Ciré, Prah, Sanoko, and Simonse.

Reprint of the 1816 edition, edited and with an introduction by Charles Hansford Adams, ix–lv.

Also presented at the 48th Annual Meeting of the African Studies Association, 17–20 November 2005 Washington, DC).

For contents see Allam, Ankum, Dorn, Eigler, Faroqhi, Gestrich, Haedrich, Haverkamp, Heinen, Heinz, Herrmann-Otto, Mensching, Nippel, Raphael, Wieling, Wöhrle, and Zimmermann.

For presentations see Amiri, Auliard, Bazemo, Birliba, Bouvier, Buis, Chaulet, El Bouzidi, Garcia Mac Gaw, Gärtner, Gauthier, Grieshaber, Gualerzi, Guanche, Demaille, Katsari and Dal Lago, Lopez Barja de Quiroga, Melluso, Merola, Mignot, Paradiso, Petre-Grenouilleau, Peyras, Pierobon, Prieto, Rodriguez Gervas, Rotman, Santini, Tamiolaki, Valdes, and Youni.

For contents see Green, Parker Pearson, and Taylor.

For relevant presentations see Hondius and Pruitt.

For contents see Blumenthal, Casares, Fonseca, Fra-Molinero, Jordan, Kaplan, Lahon, Lawrence, Lowe (2), Minnich, and Tognetti.

For relevant contents see Bernasconi and Mann, Reiss, and Uzgalis.

For contents see Nesbitt, Reinhardt, and Simek.

For contents see Chaplin, Gaspar, Horn and Morgan, and Kea.

Based on papers from the conference “Slavery, Unfree Labour and Revolt in Asia and the Indian Ocean Region,” held at University of Avignon, October 2001; a special issue of the Journal Slavery & Abolition.

For contents see Allen, Alpers, Campbell and Alpers, Hoskins, Kim, Lambek, Miers, Salman, and Walker.

For contents see Anderson, Campbell (2), Chatterjee, Clarence-Smith, Dasgupta, Eno, Klein, Miers, Mirzai, Salman, Sheriff, and Worden.

For contents see Allibert, Fuma, Polényk, Ravelomanana, Sermet, Tardieu, and Vergès.

DVD. 52 minutes.

For contents see Arditi, Blanchy, Botte, Boutang, Boyer, Bullard, Dali, Deshusses, Dottridge, Giuffrida, Klein, Leservoisier, McDougall, Miers, Morice, Moujoud and Pourette, Paiva, Razafindralambo, Saïbou, Vergès, and Viti.

For contents see Arrouye, Aurélia, Birat, Brodzki, Cuder-Dominguez, D'Aguiar, Depardieu, Eckstein, Gomez, Gunning, Gyssels, Harding, Julien, Lafargue, Ledent, Misrahi-Barak, Moudileno, O'Callaghan, Phillips, Rice, Roblin, Rochmann, Rushdy, Scharfman, Sharpe, Soto Garcia, Teelucksingh, Woodard, and Yelin.

For presentations see Berry, Biondi, Brooks, Davis, Mattos, McCarthy, Smith, Thompson, and Williams.

9. Other

For contents see Alpers, Capela, Curto and Soulodre-LaFrance, Eltis, Graden, Kiddy, Kriger, Landers, Parés, Reis, Rey, Schuler, and Soumonni.

For presentations see Croff, Diop, Harrow, Herzberger-Fofana, and Seck.

For relevant contents see Gonçalves (2), Green, Kpotogbé, and Sindou.

Reprint of the 1815 edition with an introduction by Aimé Césaire.

Revised edition of the 1981 imprint.

Reprint of the 1791 edition, with an introduction by François Bessire.

Reprint of the 1762 journal, edited by Bernard Plasse, with preface by Olivier Pétré-Grenouilleau.

Translation, by Richard Wall, of Marques's Sons do silêncio (1999).

For presentations see Allain, Behrendt, Blackstock, Elder, Haggerty, Hamilton, Howman, Kanakamedala, Leonard, Longmore, Lovejoy, Morgan, Pope, Rice, Richardson, Robinson, Rouse, Schwarz, Thomas, Tibbles, Walls, and Walsh.

Review of Deyle's Carry Me Back: The Domestic Slave Trade in American Life.

For presentations see Alpers, Blyth, Brown, Christopher, Hamilton, McCarthy, Rediker, Warren, and Webster.

For contents see Alpers (2), Bonate, Capela, Florentino, Giblin, Harries, Isaacman and Isaacman, Kiriama, Sheriff, Teelock, and Zimba (2).

For contents see Filaba, Olaniyi, Okpevra, Okpoko, and Salau.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Thomas Thurston

Thomas Thurston is Director of Education at the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition at the Whitney and Betty MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies at Yale University.

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