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Slavery and Economic Development: Brazil and the United States South in the Nineteenth Century
54
Citations
132
References
1981
Year
Historical GeographyColonialismLatin American StudyEconomic DevelopmentEconomic HistoryUnited StatesSocial SciencesGlobal SouthUnited States SouthAfrican American StudiesLatin American HistoryEconomic InequalitySlave Trade StudiesComparative PoliticsWorld Economic HistoryJudgments HistoriansUnited States NorthAfrican American SlaveryBusinessDebt BondageAbolitionismAnthropologyNineteenth Century
All history is comparative. The judgments historians make are derived from some explicit or implicit standard of comparison. Thus, when historians describe the antebellum South in the United States as technically backward, rural, nonindustrial, socially retrograde, and paternalistic, they mean to say that it was so in comparison with the North. When historians of nineteenthcentury Brazil describe it in the same terms, they compare it either to the hegemonic capitalist areas of that period, including the United States North, or to Brazil itself at later periods in its history.
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