Rape and race in the nineteenth-century South / Diane Miller Sommerville.

Challenging notions of race and sexuality presumed to have originated and flourished in the slave South, Diane Miller Sommerville traces the evolution of white southerners' fears of black rape by examining actual cases of black-on-white rape throughout the nineteenth century.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sommerville, Diane Miller (Author)
Format: Ebook
Language:English
Published: Chapel Hill ; London : The University of North Carolina Press, [2004]
Subjects:
Online Access:HeinOnline Women and the Law (Peggy)
Table of contents
Publisher description
Table of Contents:
  • Not so heinous as at first might be supposed : slave rape, gender, and class in old South communities
  • A manifest distinction between a woman and a female child : rape law, children, and the antebellum South
  • He shall suffer death : Black-on-white rape law in the early South
  • The very helplessness of the accused appeals to our sympathy : rape, race, and Southern appellate law
  • Against all odds? : Free Blacks on trial for rape in the antebellum South
  • Rarely known to violate a white woman : slave rape in Civil War-era Virginia
  • Our judiciary system is a farce : remapping the legal landscape of rape in the post-emancipation South
  • Foul daughter of Reconstruction? : Black rape in the Reconstruction South
  • The old thread-bare lie : the rape myth and alternatives to lynching
  • Appendix. Rape, race, and rhetoric : the rape myth in historiographical perspective.
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