Craig Perry
@caperry.bsky.social
Teacher-scholar at the intersection of World History, Jewish Studies, and Islamic Civilizations Studies. New book in 2026: https://bit.ly/PerrySlavery. Co-editor: The Cambridge World History of Slavery vol. 2: https://bit.ly/CWHS2
Thanks for mentioning Hartman. I didn’t know about the book. Sounds great. Love Heresy.
November 8, 2025 at 3:55 AM
Thanks for mentioning Hartman. I didn’t know about the book. Sounds great. Love Heresy.
Thank you, Michael.
November 8, 2025 at 3:38 AM
Thank you, Michael.
You can follow her @clairedillon.bsky.social !
September 17, 2025 at 4:34 PM
You can follow her @clairedillon.bsky.social !
Thank you! And congratulations on your new book, too! 🎉
September 7, 2025 at 7:50 PM
Thank you! And congratulations on your new book, too! 🎉
I hear you about parenthood and limited leisure time! I have no idea if there will be an audiobook for my book but Slaves in the Family by Edward Ball and They Were Once Her Property by Stephanie Jones-Rodgers made good-listening audiobooks for me.
September 7, 2025 at 7:48 PM
I hear you about parenthood and limited leisure time! I have no idea if there will be an audiobook for my book but Slaves in the Family by Edward Ball and They Were Once Her Property by Stephanie Jones-Rodgers made good-listening audiobooks for me.
It’s representative of one type of relationship—one between men. Enslaved and free men could also clash, with the enslaved man being flogged in the case I open the book with. My book focuses mainly on enslaved women and their fortunes varied widely. Most did not have the latitude that Bomma did.
September 7, 2025 at 7:48 PM
It’s representative of one type of relationship—one between men. Enslaved and free men could also clash, with the enslaved man being flogged in the case I open the book with. My book focuses mainly on enslaved women and their fortunes varied widely. Most did not have the latitude that Bomma did.