This book explores the centrality of contract to debates over freedom and slavery in nineteenth-century America.
Integrating the fields of gender and legal, intellectual and social history, it reveals how abolitionists, former slaves, feminists, laborers, lawmakers and others drew on contract to co.
It focuses on the contracts of Wage Labor and marriage, investigating the connections between abolition in the South and industrial capitalism in the North and linking Labor relations to home life.
This book explores the centrality of contract to debates over freedom and slavery in nineteenth-century America