The Mark of Slavery: Disability, Race, and Gender in Antebellum America

Jenifer L. Barclay
University of Illinois Press

Antebellum Americans justified slavery and white supremacy by linking blackness to disability, defectiveness, and dependency. Jenifer L. Barclay examines the ubiquitous narratives that depicted black people with disabilities as pitiable, monstrous, or comical, narratives used not only to defend slavery but argue against it. As she shows, this relationship between ableism and racism impacted racial identities during the antebellum period and played an overlooked role in shaping American history afterward.

Read more at University of Illinois Press

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The Shattering: America in the 1960s

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To Poison a Nation: The Murder of Robert Charles and the Rise of Jim Crow Policing in America