Bookbot

Peter Kolchin

    Unfree Labor
    Emancipation
    • Emancipation

      The Abolition and Aftermath of American Slavery and Russian Serfdom

      • 568bladzijden
      • 20 uur lezen

      The book explores the parallels between the American emancipation and the Russian Great Reforms, highlighting how both societies navigated the challenges of transitioning to freedom. Historian Peter Kolchin delves into the socio-political dynamics and the varied outcomes of these monumental changes, providing a comparative analysis that sheds light on the complexities of liberation and reform in different historical contexts. Through this examination, the author reveals insights into the struggles and successes faced by newly freed individuals in both nations.

      Emancipation
      4,0
    • Unfree Labor

      American Slavery and Russian Serfdom

      • 534bladzijden
      • 19 uur lezen

      In the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, two significant systems of unfree labor emerged: the American enslavement of blacks and the Russian subjugation of serfs. These systems developed uniquely until their legal abolition in the mid-nineteenth century. Historian Peter Kolchin offers a comprehensive comparison of these systems, elucidating their organization, structure, and dynamics while highlighting both similarities and key differences that emerge through comparative analysis. The distinctions between the two systems involved both masters and bondsmen. American slaveholders, characterized by independence and a resident mentality, mounted a vigorous defense of slavery against external threats. In contrast, Russian serfholders, often absentee and reliant on central authority, struggled to protect serfdom effectively. Russian serfs, generally residing on larger estates and experiencing less direct interference, were able to assert some communal autonomy but lacked solidarity with peasants beyond their villages. Conversely, American slaves exhibited greater individualism and a stronger sense of identification with all blacks, both enslaved and free. Kolchin identifies universal features in master-bondsman relations while also detailing the distinct experiences of slaves and serfs, including patterns of resistance. Despite the dominance of their masters, both slaves and serfs significantly influenced the nature

      Unfree Labor