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Freedom Bound
Law, Labor, and Civic Identity in Colonizing English America, 1580–1865

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  • Date Published: September 2010
  • availability: This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
  • format: Adobe eBook Reader
  • isbn: 9780511784750

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About the Authors
  • Freedom Bound is about the origins of modern America - a history of colonizing, work and civic identity from the beginnings of English presence on the mainland until the Civil War. It is a history of migrants and migrations, of colonizers and colonized, of households and servitude and slavery, and of the freedom all craved and some found. Above all it is a history of the law that framed the entire process. Freedom Bound tells how colonies were planted in occupied territories, how they were populated with migrants - free and unfree - to do the work of colonizing and how the newcomers secured possession. It tells of the new civic lives that seemed possible in new commonwealths and of the constraints that kept many from enjoying them. It follows the story long past the end of the eighteenth century until the American Civil War, when - just for a moment - it seemed that freedom might finally be unbound.

    • The first truly exhaustive history of law and labor in early America
    • Nails colonizing to the center of American history and legal history to the center of colonizing
    • A seamless combination of labor and legal history with the history of race and of gender
    • Empirically exhaustive and methodologically diverse – combines perspectives drawn from social and political history with intellectual history and cultural studies, and quantification with literary analysis
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    Awards

    • Joint winner of the 2011 Bancroft Prize
    More

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    Product details

    • Date Published: September 2010
    • format: Adobe eBook Reader
    • isbn: 9780511784750
    • contains: 1 b/w illus. 23 tables
    • availability: This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
  • Table of Contents

    Prologue. Beginning: 'as much freedome in reason as may be'
    Part I. Manning, Planting, Keeping:
    1. Manning: 'setteynge many on worke'
    2. Planting: 'directed and conducted thither'
    3. Keeping (i): discourses of intrusion
    4. Keeping (ii): English desires, designs
    Part II. Poly-Olbion, or the Inside Narrative:
    5. Packing: new inhabitants
    6. Unpacking: received wisdoms
    7. Changing: localities, legalities
    Part III. 'What, Then, Is the American, This New Man?':
    8. Modernizing: polity, economy, patriarchy
    9. Enslaving: facies hippocratica
    10. Ending: 'strange order of things!'.

  • Instructors have used or reviewed this title for the following courses

    • American Legal History Seminar
    • At the Edges of Freedom: Liberalism and Postemancipation Societies in the Western Hemisphere
    • Constituional History--the founding years
    • History of American Law
    • Race Gender Labor
    • Senior Seminar: Imperialism in US LIterature & Culture
    • U.S. Legal History
    • labor law
  • Author

    Christopher Tomlins, University of California, Berkeley
    Christopher Tomlins is currently Professor of Law at the University of California, Irvine, on leave from the American Bar Foundation in Chicago, where he has been a Research Professor since 1992. Tomlins began his career at La Trobe University in Melbourne; he has also taught at the Marshall-Wythe Law School, College of William and Mary in Virginia; at Northwestern University Law School; and at Tel Aviv and Haifa Universities in Israel. His interests and research are cast very broadly - from sixteenth-century England to twentieth-century America and from the legal culture of work and labor to the interrelations of law and literature. He has written or edited six books, including, most recently, the multi-volume Cambridge History of Law in America, co-edited with Michael Grossberg. His publications have been awarded the Surrency Prize of the American Society for Legal History, the Littleton–Griswold Prize of the American Historical Association and the Hurst Prize of the Law and Society Association. Tomlins currently edits two Cambridge University Press book series: Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society and Cambridge New Histories of American Law (with Michael Grossberg).

    Awards

    • Joint winner of the 2011 Bancroft Prize
    • Winner of the 2011 Hurst Prize
    • Winner of the 2011 John Phillip Reid Book Award of the American Society for Legal History
    • A Choice Outstanding Academic Title, 2011

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