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Gold versus Life: Jobbing Gangs and British Caribbean Slavery

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Gold versus Life: Jobbing Gangs and British Caribbean Slavery. / Radburn, Nicholas; Roberts, Justin.
In: William & Mary Quarterly, Vol. 76, No. 2, 01.04.2019, p. 223-256.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Radburn, N & Roberts, J 2019, 'Gold versus Life: Jobbing Gangs and British Caribbean Slavery', William & Mary Quarterly, vol. 76, no. 2, pp. 223-256. https://doi.org/10.5309/willmaryquar.76.2.0223

APA

Vancouver

Radburn N, Roberts J. Gold versus Life: Jobbing Gangs and British Caribbean Slavery. William & Mary Quarterly. 2019 Apr 1;76(2):223-256. doi: 10.5309/willmaryquar.76.2.0223

Author

Radburn, Nicholas ; Roberts, Justin. / Gold versus Life : Jobbing Gangs and British Caribbean Slavery. In: William & Mary Quarterly. 2019 ; Vol. 76, No. 2. pp. 223-256.

Bibtex

@article{e2631e237dc94498ba285d035d92e438,
title = "Gold versus Life: Jobbing Gangs and British Caribbean Slavery",
abstract = "Jobbing gangs—large groups of enslaved people who were principally hired out to dig sugarcane holes—were a crucial component of the British Caribbean slave economy. Emerging first in the early eighteenth century, they comprised approximately 10 percent of enslaved people in the British Caribbean by the late eighteenth century before declining after the abolition of the slave trade. The growth in jobbing gangs stemmed from elite sugar planters{\textquoteright} desires to temporarily augment their permanent captive labor force, boost productivity, and simultaneously preserve the health of their own enslaved laborers. The enormous profits that middling whites could earn by buying captive Africans and hiring them out as a jobbing gang accelerated social mobility in the islands. The captives whom these whites enslaved were highly mobile, enabling them to escape the confines of a single plantation. But they also experienced some of the worst working and living conditions of any enslaved people in the Americas, exposing significant inequalities among British Caribbean slaves. Examining the origins, operation, and eventual decline of jobbing gangs thus revealsthe British Caribbean sugar economy as an insidiously adaptable institution that combined the flexibility of wage labor with the unmitigated violence of racial slavery.",
author = "Nicholas Radburn and Justin Roberts",
year = "2019",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.5309/willmaryquar.76.2.0223",
language = "English",
volume = "76",
pages = "223--256",
journal = "William & Mary Quarterly",
issn = "0043-5597",
publisher = "Omohundro Institute, Williamsburg, Virginia",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gold versus Life

T2 - Jobbing Gangs and British Caribbean Slavery

AU - Radburn, Nicholas

AU - Roberts, Justin

PY - 2019/4/1

Y1 - 2019/4/1

N2 - Jobbing gangs—large groups of enslaved people who were principally hired out to dig sugarcane holes—were a crucial component of the British Caribbean slave economy. Emerging first in the early eighteenth century, they comprised approximately 10 percent of enslaved people in the British Caribbean by the late eighteenth century before declining after the abolition of the slave trade. The growth in jobbing gangs stemmed from elite sugar planters’ desires to temporarily augment their permanent captive labor force, boost productivity, and simultaneously preserve the health of their own enslaved laborers. The enormous profits that middling whites could earn by buying captive Africans and hiring them out as a jobbing gang accelerated social mobility in the islands. The captives whom these whites enslaved were highly mobile, enabling them to escape the confines of a single plantation. But they also experienced some of the worst working and living conditions of any enslaved people in the Americas, exposing significant inequalities among British Caribbean slaves. Examining the origins, operation, and eventual decline of jobbing gangs thus revealsthe British Caribbean sugar economy as an insidiously adaptable institution that combined the flexibility of wage labor with the unmitigated violence of racial slavery.

AB - Jobbing gangs—large groups of enslaved people who were principally hired out to dig sugarcane holes—were a crucial component of the British Caribbean slave economy. Emerging first in the early eighteenth century, they comprised approximately 10 percent of enslaved people in the British Caribbean by the late eighteenth century before declining after the abolition of the slave trade. The growth in jobbing gangs stemmed from elite sugar planters’ desires to temporarily augment their permanent captive labor force, boost productivity, and simultaneously preserve the health of their own enslaved laborers. The enormous profits that middling whites could earn by buying captive Africans and hiring them out as a jobbing gang accelerated social mobility in the islands. The captives whom these whites enslaved were highly mobile, enabling them to escape the confines of a single plantation. But they also experienced some of the worst working and living conditions of any enslaved people in the Americas, exposing significant inequalities among British Caribbean slaves. Examining the origins, operation, and eventual decline of jobbing gangs thus revealsthe British Caribbean sugar economy as an insidiously adaptable institution that combined the flexibility of wage labor with the unmitigated violence of racial slavery.

U2 - 10.5309/willmaryquar.76.2.0223

DO - 10.5309/willmaryquar.76.2.0223

M3 - Journal article

VL - 76

SP - 223

EP - 256

JO - William & Mary Quarterly

JF - William & Mary Quarterly

SN - 0043-5597

IS - 2

ER -