Abstract

Abstract:

This article examines early modern European and colonial American understandings of racial and slave status as hereditary conditions rooted in blood. Focusing primarily on the Chesapeake and Caribbean colonies, I argue that notions of inheritable blood shaped the development of legal innovations and social practices linking African maternal ancestry to permanent commodification and marginalization. Across the Anglo-Atlantic world, unregulated sexual behaviors disrupted racial legal regimes increasingly undergirded by fictions of blood, leading to legal prohibitions against, and ongoing sociocultural concerns surrounding, interethnic mixture.

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