White Over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812Posted in Books, Economics, History, Media Archive, Monographs, Slavery, Social Science, United States on 2010-03-16 00:38Z by Steven | 
White Over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812
University of North Carolina Press
1968-09-25 (Republished: September 1995)
671 pages
8.9 x 6 x 1.4 inches
ISBN: 978-0-8078-4550-9
Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia
Winthrop D. Jordan (1931-2007)
- Winner of the 1968 Francis Parkman Prize, Society of American Historians
 - Winner of the 1969 National Book Award
 - Winner of the 1969 Bancroft Prize, Columbia University
 - Winner of the 1968 Ralph Waldo Emerson Award, Phi Beta Kappa
 
The paperback edition of Jordan’s classic and award-winning work on the history of American race relations.
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part One. GENESIS 1550-1700
I. First Impressions: Initial English Confrontation with Africans
- The Blackness Without
 - The Causes of Complexion
 - Defective Religion
 - Savage Behavior
 - The Apes of Africa
 - The Blackness Within
 
II. Unthinking Decision: Enslavement of Negroes in America to 1700
- The Necessities of a New World
 - Freedom and Bondage in the English Tradition
 - The Concept of Slavery
 - The Practices of Portingals and Spanyards
 - Enslavement: The West Indies
 - Enslavement: New England
 - Enslavement: Virginia and Maryland
 - Enslavement: New York and the Carolinas
 - The Un-English: Scots, Irish, and Indians
 - Racial Slavery: From Reasons to Rational
 
Part Two. PROVINCIAL DECADES 1700-1755
III. Anxious Oppressors: Freedom and Control in a Slave Society
- Demographic Configurations in the Colonies
 - Slavery and the Senses of the Laws
 - Slave Rebelliousness and the White Mastery
 - Free Negroes and Fears of Freedom
 - Racial Slavery in a Free Society
 
IV. Fruits of Passion: The Dynamics of Interracial Sex
- Regional Styles in Racial Intermixture
 - Masculine and Feminine Modes in Carolina and America
 - Negro Sexuality and Slave Insurrection
 - Dismemberment, Physiology, and Sexual Perceptions
 - The Secularization of Reproduction
 - Mulatto Offspring in a Biracial Society
 
V. The Souls of Men: The Negro’s Spiritual Nature
- Christian Principles and the Failure of Conversion
 - The Question of Negro Capacity
 - Spiritual Equality and Temporal Subordination
 - The Thin Edge of Antislavery
 - Inclusion and Exclusion in the Protestant Churches
 - Religious Revivial and the Impact of Conversion
 
VI. The Bodies of Men: The Negro’s Physical Nature
- Confusion, Order and Hierarchy
 - Negroes, Apes, and Beasts
 - Rational Science and Irrational Logic
 - Indians, Africans, and the Complexion of Man
 - The Valuation of Color
 - Negroes Under the Skin
 
Part Three. THE REVOLUTIONARY ERA 1755-1783
VII. Self-Scrutiny in the Revolutionary Era
- Quaker Conscience and Consciousness
 - The Discovery of Prejudice
 - Assertions of Sameness
 - Environmentalism and Revolutionary Ideology
 - The Secularization of Equality
 - The Proslavery Case of Negro Inferiority
 - The Revolution as Turning Point
 
Pt. 4 SOCIETY AND THOUGHT 1783-1812
VIII. The Imperatives of Economic Interest and National Identity
- The Economics of Slavery
 - Union and Sectionalism
 - A National Forum for Debate
 - Nationhood and Identity
 - Non-English Englishment
 
IX. The Limitations of Antislavery
- The Pattern of Antislavry
 - The Failings of Revolutionary Ideology
 - The Quaker View Beyond Emancipation
 - Religious Equalitarianism
 - Humanitarianism and Sentimentality
 - The Success and Failure of Antislavery
 
X. The Cancer of Revolution
- St. Domingo
 - Non-Importation of Rebellion
 - The Contagion of Liberty
 - Slave Disobedience in America
 - The Impact of Negro Revolt
 
XI. The Resulting Pattern of Separation
- The Hardening of Slavery
 - Restraint of Free Negroes
 - The Walls of Separation
 - Negro Churches
 
Part Five THOUGH AND SOCIETY 1783-1812
XII. Thomas Jefferson: Self and Society
- Jefferson: The Tyranny of Slavery
 - Jefferson: The Assertion of Negro Inferiority
 - The Issue of Intellect
 - The Acclaim of Talented Negroes
 - Jefferson: Passionate Realities
 - Jefferson: White Women and Black
 - Interracial Sex: The Individual and His Society
 - Jefferson: A Dichotomous View of Triracial America
 
XIII. The Negro Bound by the Chain of Being
- Linnaean Categories and the Chain of Being
 - Two Modes of Equality
 - The Hierarchies of Men
 - Anatomical Investigations
 - Unlinking and Linking the Chain
 - Faithful Philosophy in Defense of Human Unity
 - The Study of Man in the Republic
 
XIV. Erasing Nature’s Stamp of Color
- Nature’s Blackball
 - The Effects of Climate and Civilization
 - The Disease of Color
 - White Negroes
 - The Logic of Blackness and Inner Similarity
 - The Winds of Change
 - An End of Environmentalism
 - Persistent Themes
 
XV. Toward a White Man’s Country
- The Emancipation and Intermixture
 - The Beginning of Colonization
 - The Virginia Program
 - Insurrection and Expatriation in Virginia
 - The Meaning of Negro Removal
 
XVI. Exodus
Note on the Concept of Race
Essay on Sources
Select List of Full Titles
Map: Percentage of Negroes in Total Non-Aboriginal Population, 1790
Index
