White Women, Black Men: Illicit Sex in the Nineteenth-Century South : Editorial Reviews Amazon.com Review White Women, Black Men is a fascinating study of a category of interracial relationships that conventional wisdom has held did not exist: liaisons (the term author Martha Hodes prefers) between black men and white women in the antebellum South. Hodes shows how such relationships were tolerated, though not encouraged, to a surprising degree before the Civil War. In a fascinating feat of historical detective work, she uses court documents and other records in cases involving racial status, rape, divorce, and property, to explore the nature of these relationships. She shows white women who voluntarily gave up their privileged status to cohabit with black men, and white communities that turned a blind eye toward such unions. It was not until after the Civil War--when freedom for blacks meant Southern whites needed new ways to enforce their putative superiority--that black men were routinely punished with violence for real, or imagined, relationships with white women. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. From Library Journal Hodes (history, New York Univ.) provides the first real scholarly exploration of this important topic. Relying primarily on legal documents and testimony generated by court cases, Hodes gives us several detailed case studies. She finds that before the Civil War, whites generally did not react violently to cases of interracial liaison but rather displayed a complex range of attitudes, from indifference to concern (especially if children resulted from the "connection"). In the postbellum period, however, whites often responded with extreme violence to any hint of miscegenation. Indeed, in an effort to diminish black political power, whites often invented incidents of interracial contact and reacted accordingly. A brilliant work, imaginatively researched and well written. Highly recommended.?Anthony O. Edmonds, Ball State Univ., Product Description This book is the first to explore the history of a powerful category of illicit sex in America`s past: liaisons between Southern white women and black men. Martha Hodes tells a series of stories about such liaisons in the years before the Civil War, explores the complex ways in which white Southerners tolerated them in the slave South, and shows how and why these responses changed with emancipation. _________________________________________________________________ sounds interesting
Goodlove,she also wrote the book called The Sea Captain's Wife about a poor WW married to a Black West Indian sea captain.
I read both this and the The Sea Captain's Wife. She covers what she can glean from court documents and secondary sources but really only delves into the south. For me the best books on the topic remain J.A. Rogers' Sex and Race series, which is chock full of interesting stories.
Interesting. I noticed my library system has a few of these book in the state. I'm gonna have to place a hold on one.
J,the books by J.A.Rogers are the best on IR not only in the US but,the world. Some of the couples had a hard life but,they will not wait for society to change their ways about them.
Yep, I find reading these kind of stories from history to be fascinating. It's full of very insightful subject matters.