Searching for the Invisible Woman: The Evolution of White Women's Experience in Britain's West Indian Colonies
- 29 January 2009
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in History Compass
- Vol. 7 (1), 329-341
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1478-0542.2008.00567.x
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- "The Cause of Her Grief": The Rape of a Slave in Early New EnglandJournal of American History, 2007
- ‘Rioting in goatish embraces’: Marriage and improvement in early British JamaicaThe History of the Family, 2006
- "The Late Flagrant Instance of Depravity in My Family": The Story of an Anglo-Jamaican CuckoldThe William and Mary Quarterly, 2003
- A Failed Settler Society: Marriage and Demographic Failure in Early JamaicaJournal of Social History, 1994
- London and the colonial consumer in the late seventeenth centuryThe Economic History Review, 1994
- Inheritance and Independence: Women's Status in Early Colonial JamaicaThe William and Mary Quarterly, 1991
- The Character of Difference: The Creole Woman as Cultural Mediator in Narratives About JamaicaEighteenth-Century Studies, 1990
- The Evolution of White Women's Experience in Early AmericaThe American Historical Review, 1984
- White ‘ladies’, coloured ‘favourites’ and black ‘wenches’; some considerations on sex, race and class factors in social relations in white Creole Society in the British CaribbeanSlavery & Abolition, 1981
- The Planter's Wife: The Experience of White Women in Seventeenth-Century MarylandThe William and Mary Quarterly, 1977