Mr. Marshall's book ranges beyond these three men and their lives to look at general aspects of American slavery and its legacy for African-Americans in America today.
BLACK & ASIAN STUDIES NEWSLETTER
Compelling. . . Marshall successfully reads against the grain of long-ignored published historical sources, makes a strong case for the consideration of slavery in the rural North, and smartly balances analytic precision with interpretive framework.
PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY: A JOURNAL OF MID-ATLANTIC STUDIES
Manhood Enslaved is most successful in its richly detailed portrayal of the many-faceted daily lives of enslaved people in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century New Jersey.
JOURNAL OF AMERICAN HISTORY