Cul de Sac: Patrimony, Capitalism, and Slavery in French Saint-Domingue
By Paul Cheney
Paperback
$34.00
By Paul Cheney
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In the eighteenth century, the Cul de Sac plain in Saint-Domingue, now Haiti, was a vast open-air workhouse of sugar plantations. This microhistory of one plantation owned by the Ferron de la Ferronnayses, a family of Breton nobles, draws on remarkable archival finds to show that despite the wealth such plantations produced, they operated in a context of social, political, and environmental fragility that left them weak and crisis prone.
Focusing on correspondence between the Ferronnayses a...
Focusing on correspondence between the Ferronnayses a...






















