Camp's Closer To Freedom Analysis

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Camp’s Closer to Freedom is an examination of black women’s resistance to slavery as a way to disprove previous notions of slaves as content to their enslavement. She takes advantage of personal slave narratives, white planter papers, and oral histories such as WPA interviews. Eugene Genovese’s Roll, Jordan, Roll claims that enslaved men and women did not have successful large-scale acts of resistance because of slaveholder paternalism. As a result, resistance was portrayed as insignificant and infrequent given that the greatest effective paternalistic regimes inspired compliance among enslaved people. For Camp, Genovese’s idea of slaveholder paternalism is unsatisfying because it “overestimates the extent of consent at the expense of of the

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