- University of South Carolina Press
Stono: Documenting and Interpreting a Southern Slave Revolt
Key Metrics
- Mark M Smith
- University of South Carolina Press
- Paperback
- 9781570036057
- 7.84 X 7.26 X 0.45 inches
- 0.46 pounds
- History > United States - Colonial Period (1600-1775)
- English
Book Description
In the fall of 1739, as many as one hundred enslaved African and African Americans living within twenty miles of Charleston joined forces to strike down their white owners and march en masse toward Spanish Florida and freedom. More than sixty whites and thirty slaves died in the violence that followed. Among the most important slave revolts in colonial America, the Stono Rebellion also ranks as South Carolina's largest slave insurrection and one of the bloodiest uprisings in American history. Significant for the fear it cast among lowcountry slaveholders and for the repressive slave laws enacted in its wake, Stono continues to attract scholarly attention as a historical event worthy of study and reinterpretation.
Edited by Mark M. Smith, Stono: Documenting and Interpreting a Southern Slave Revolt introduces readers to the documents needed to understand both the revolt and the ongoing discussion among scholars about the legacy of the insurrection. Smith has assembled a compendium of materials necessary for an informed examination of the revolt. Primary documents-including some works previously unpublished and largely unknown even to specialists-offer accounts of the violence, discussions of Stono's impact on white sensibilities, and public records relating incidents of the uprising. To these primary sources Smith adds three divergent interpretations that expand on Peter H. Wood's pioneering study Black Majority: Negroes in Colonial South Carolina from 1670 through the Stono Rebellion. Excerpts from works by John K. Thornton, Edward A. Pearson, and Smith himself reveal how historians have used some of the same documents to construct radically different interpretations of the revolt's causes, meaning, and effects.
Author Bio
Carolina Distinguished Professor of History Mark M Smith teaches American social and cultural history, with emphasis on the American South and sensory history.
A Carolina Distinguished Professor, Mark Smith teaches the introductory undergraduate survey to US history (to 1865), undergraduate courses on the Old South, and graduate courses on the U.S. nineteenth-century.
He is author of Mastered by the Clock: Time, Slavery, and Freedom in the American South (winner of the Organization of American Historians' 1997 Avery O. Craven Award and South Carolina Historical Society's Book of the Year); Debating Slavery: Economy and Society in the Antebellum American South, published by Cambridge University Press in 1998; Listening to Nineteenth-Century America (University of North Carolina Press, 2001), How Race Is Made: Slavery, Segregation, and the Senses (University of North Carolina Press, 2006; a 2007 Choice Outstanding Academic Title), Sensing the Past: Seeing, Hearing, Smelling, Tasting, and Touching in History (University of California Press, 2008), Camille, 1969: Histories of a Hurricane (University of Georgia Press, 2011), and Hurricane Katrina and the Forgotten Coast of Mississippi (Cambridge University Press, 2014), which he co-authored with Susan Cutter, Christopher T. Emrich, Jerry T. Mitchell, Walter W. Piegorsch, and Lynn Weber. His edited books include The Old South (Blackwell, 2000), Hearing History: A Reader (University of Georgia Press, 2004), Stono: Documenting and Interpreting a Southern Slave Revolt (University of South Carolina Press, 2006), Writing the American Past (Wiley, 2008), and, with Robert Paquette, The Handbook of Slavery in the Americas (Oxford University Press, 2010).
He has published articles in the American Historical Review, Past and Present, the William and Mary Quarterly, the Journal of Southern History, the Journal of Social History, The Chronicle Review (Chronicle of Higher Education), the Journal of American History, the Journal of The Historical Society, Postmedieval: A Journal of Medieval Cultural Studies, and the Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies. He serves or has served on the Editorial Boards of the Journal of Southern History, the Journal of Social History, The Southern Quarterly, The Senses and Society, Patterns of Prejudice, Sound Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, and the Journal of American History.
Professor Smith has lectured in Europe, throughout the United States, Australia, and China. His work has been translated into Chinese and Korean and has been reviewed and featured in the New York Times, the London Times, the Chronicle of Higher Education, Brain, and Science. His work has been funded by the National Science Foundation and the British Academy and he has presented his work to the National Academy of Science, served as the William Hewit Distinguished Professor at the University of Northern Colorado, as a Lamar Lecturer, as a Guest Editor for a forum on the history of the senses for the Journal of American History, and as the General Editor of the four-volume Slavery in North America: from the Colonial Period to Emancipation (Pickering & Chatto, 2008). Professor Smith is also the General Editor of the Southern Classics Series (University of South Carolina Press), co-editor of Liverpool University's Studies in International Slavery, co-editor of Cambridge University Press’ series, Studies on the American South, and General Editor of the University of Illinois Press’ Studies in Sensory History. He is a former of winner of USC’s Michael Mungo Graduate Teaching Award, a former president of The Historical Society, and a Founding Member of the European Sound Studies Association.
He has had the honor of directing many PhD dissertations and his former students teach and conduct research at, among other institutions, the University of Warwick (UK), Iowa State University, the University of North Carolina, the University of Wisconsin, the University of Wyoming, the University of New Mexico, the South Carolina Department of Archives and History, and the Office of the Historian, US Department of State. His former students have published their revised dissertations with the University of Georgia Press, the Johns Hopkins University Press, and Cambridge University Press.
Professor Smith regularly reviews books for The Wall Street Journal and also writes pieces on Mixed Martial Arts for bleacherreport.com. His book, The Smells of Battle, The Tastes of Siege: A Sensory History of the Civil War, was published by Oxford University Press in 2014 and was reviewed in The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The New York Review of Books, and Slate. It was named a Foreign Affairs Best Book of 2014.
Source: University of South Carolina
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