Berlin is not the first to assert that slave life in the early history of the country was far from what it became before the Civil War. Another author notes, "In his study of the poor in early America, Philip D. Morgan notes that some slaves in the Chesapeake region might have had more material benefits than some destitute whites. Nonetheless, Morgan reiterates the famous observation of the scholar, Orlando Patterson, that slavery was 'social death'" (Rabe). Here is where Berlin and other authors differ. Berlin acknowledges the evils of slavery at times, but his book is more like an account of social and racial class formation, and it glosses over many of the harsh realities that have been often repeated in slavery. In this, he seems to do a disservice to the black community, and to those slaves who suffered during this time. He shows how slaves were free to work outside their duties for their masters, grew their own gardens, and had certain rights. However, they were still slaves, and still the property of another human being. He seems to think that because they had certain freedoms, they were better off, somehow, and this seems to be a little bit one-sided and unusual.
Berlin's book does, however, chronicle the slow shift from relative independence to new rules, regulations, and a much stricter way of life in the slave communities by the turn of the nineteenth century. He writes, "Indeed, by the end of the second decade of the nineteenth century, the internal economies initiated by the charter generations and maintained through the eighteenth century remained intact" (Berlin 347). However, the emerging plantation regime would begin to erode these freedoms, and as Berlin so aptly notes, "White supremacy manifested itself in every aspect of antebellum society, from the ballot box to he bedroom" (Berlin 363). Black slaves were disenfranchised on every level, lost most of the freedoms they had fought for in early centuries, and became mere chattel to their masters.
On the other hand, Berlin's book does not even touch on many aspects of slavery that occurred, even in the first...
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