Robert William Fogel
Without Consent or Contract
The Rise and Fall of American Slavery
"[Fogel's] exceedingly careful testing of all possible sources and his pioneering
methodological approach have allowed [him] both to increase our knowledge of an institutions
operation and disintegration and to renew our methods of research." from the
citation to Robert William Fogel for the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences
Over the past quarter-century, Robert William Fogel has blazed new trails in
scholarship on the lives of the slaves in the American South. Now he presents
the dramatic rise and fall of the "peculiar institution," as the abolitionist
movement rose into a powerful political force that pulled down a seemingly
impregnable system.
"Few historians have more skillfully integrated economic with social,
intellectual, and political history. . . . Pleasurable as well as instructive
reading for anyone interested in the most fateful of our national crimes and
the most fearful of our national crises. . . . [A] splendid book."
Eugene D. Genovese, Los Angeles Times Book Review
Robert William Fogel is director of the Center for Population Economics at the University of Chicago
and coauthor of Time on the Cross, which marked the start of a new period
of slavery scholarship. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1993.
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