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  2. Paternalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paternalism

    Paternalism was used as an argument against the emancipation of slavery due to these mistresses providing better living conditions than the enslaved's counterpart in the factory-based north. [8] As a result of this conclusion, the whites would often manage basic rights of the enslaved such as child rearing and property.

  3. The Slave Community - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Slave_Community

    Ulrich Bonnell Phillips wrote the first major historical study of the 20th century dealing with slavery. In American Negro Slavery (1918), Phillips refers to slaves as "negroes, who for the most part were by racial quality submissive rather than defiant, light-hearted instead of gloomy, amiable and ingratiating instead of sullen, and whose very defects invited paternalism rather than repression."

  4. Eugene Genovese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_Genovese

    Genovese placed paternalism at the center of the master-slave relationship. Both masters and slaves embraced paternalism but for different reasons and with varying notions of what paternalism meant. For the slaveowners, paternalism allowed them to think of themselves as benevolent and to justify their appropriation of their slaves' labor.

  5. Slavery as a positive good in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_as_a_positive_good...

    American statesman John C. Calhoun was one of the most prominent advocates of the "slavery as a positive good" viewpoint.. Slavery as a positive good in the United States was the prevailing view of Southern politicians and intellectuals just before the American Civil War, as opposed to seeing it as a crime against humanity or a necessary evil.

  6. Slave-Trading in the Old South - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slave-Trading_in_the_Old_South

    Slave-Trading in the Old South by Frederic Bancroft, an independently wealthy freelance historian, is a classic [1] history of domestic slave trade in the antebellum United States. Among other things, Bancroft discredited the assertions, then common in Ulrich B. Phillips -influenced histories of antebellum America , that slave traders were ...

  7. Ulrich B. Phillips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulrich_B._Phillips

    Ulrich Bonnell Phillips (November 4, 1877 – January 21, 1934) was an American historian who largely defined the field of the social and economic studies of the history of the Antebellum South and slavery in the U.S. Phillips concentrated on the large plantations that dominated the Southern economy, and he did not investigate the numerous small farmers who held few slaves.

  8. The Peculiar Institution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Peculiar_Institution

    Stampp held that the national debate over the morality of slavery, rather than states' rights, was the focal point of the U.S. Civil War. Stampp wrote, "Prior to the Civil War southern slavery was America's most profound and vexatious social problem. More than any other problem, slavery nagged at the public conscience; offering no easy solution

  9. Padrone system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Padrone_system

    In 1886, he fought the padrone system persuading Congressman Henry B. Lovering of Massachusetts to introduce a bill to ban importation of slave contract labor from Italy into the United States. [10] On October 29, 1895, Moreno was condemned for libel against Italian minister to the United States, Baron Saverio Fava , whom he had accused of ...