The chapter of "Slavery in the South before World War II" depicts the life of the pre-war slave market through "the driver of the soul" and the eyes of the people they have enslaved. According to the person being asked, the slave is mainly "human" or "slave driver". It is thought that a slave is just "property", mere property. At the end of the day mutually beneficial relationships between slaves and their owners will change our country forever. Introduction states that the Master has released their slaves completely and in some cases provided a castration at their will.
Slavery was common in the prewar America, but the African-American slaves of the 1830s were more severe and concentrated in the prosperous farmland in the South before the war (slavery during the Civil War). Unlike the northern part with free slavery, the slavery of the southern province ensures that all slaves are "privately owned animals in their hands and owners, regardless of their intention, structure, purpose." is showing. (History of African Americans) Black men can whip without reason. In order to entertain his master, he may be beaten, deprived, or subject to torture. A black woman can do sexual harassment, beating, beating, or raping at any time without a doubt. (Women's living in the farm - articles of slavery)
The economic nature of slavery contributed to the intensification of wealth inequality before the Southern war, as slavery was to replace contractual slavery as a major labor supply to the southern plantation system Did. Small farmers in old towns such as Virginia were able to sell slaves to the south and the west because demand for slave labor and the US banned expansion of slave imports from Africa. For small planters, the potential losses such as actuarial risk, slave death, disability are much greater. Emphasizing the rise in slave prices before the Civil War, the overall cost associated with the ownership of slaves by individual plantation owners brought the concentration of slave owners on the eve of the civil war.