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2019 non-fiction book by Mary V. Thompson From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Only Unavoidable Subject of Regret": George Washington, Slavery and the Enslaved Community at Mount Vernon is a scholarly book on the history of slavery at Mount Vernon during the times of George Washington. Written by Mary V. Thompson, the book was published in the United States in 2019.
Author | Mary V. Thompson |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | History |
Publisher | University of Virginia Press |
Publication date | 2019 |
Pages | 502 |
ISBN | 0813941849 |
OCLC | 1035366283 |
Thompson stated that she had worked on the book for "about thirty years, although for a lot of that time, it didn't know that it wanted to be a book."[1]
Thompson's book contains major chapters that focus on topics that include George Washington and Martha Washington as slave owners; George Washington's changes in views about slavery over time; supervisors of slaves who were hired, indentured, or enslaved; family life in Mount Vernon's slave community; the slaves' quarters; the slaves' diets; slaves' recreation and private enterprise; and control and resistance and among Mount Vernon's slaves.
Reviews have appeared in the London Review of Books,[2] the Journal of Social History,[3] the Washington Independent Review of Books,[4] The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography,[5] the Journal of the American Revolution,[6] and Choice.[7]
In the London Review of Books, Eric Foner wrote that
virtually all the information Thompson draws on comes from whites; as she ruefully notes, "only occasionally can the voice of one of the slaves be heard." Nonetheless, her command of the sources makes possible an almost encyclopedic description of the conditions of slave life. What did slaves eat? ... What clothing did Washington provide? ... On the much debated question of whether African elements survived in slave culture, Thompson acknowledges that the evidence is scanty but cautiously suggests that some naming practices, religious beliefs and methods of food preparation reflect an African inheritance....[2]
In the Washington Independent Review of Books, Henry Wiencek wrote that
Drawing upon decades of research and writings as staff historian at Mount Vernon, Mary V. Thompson has, in "The Only Unavoidable Subject of Regret", produced a superb, moving portrait of the plantation's enslaved community. Thompson's admiration for George and Martha Washington is strong, but her focus is on the enslaved, whose stories she tells vividly and without sentimentality.[4]
The book was published by in 2019 by University of Virginia Press:
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