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Sugar Plantations in the Formation of Brazilian Society : Bahia, 1550-1835

Part of the Cambridge Latin American Studies series
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This study examines the history of the sugar economy and the peculiar development of plantation society over a three hundred year period in Bahia, a major sugar plantation zone and an important terminus of the Atlantic slave trade.

Drawing on little-used archival sources, plantations accounts, and notarial records, Professor Schwartz has examined through both quantitative and qualitative methods the various groups that made up plantation society.

While he devotes much attention to masters and slaves, he views slavery ultimately as part of a larger structure of social and economic relations.

The peculiarities of sugar-making and the nature of plantation labour are used throughout the book as keys to an understanding of roles and relationships in plantation society.

A comparative perspective is also employed, so that studies of slavery elsewhere in the Americas inform the analysis, while at many points direct comparisons of the Bahian case with other plantation societies are also made.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521309344 / 9780521309349
Hardback
31/01/1986
United States
608 pages
152 x 228 mm, 1020 grams