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Cannibals all! or, Slaves without masters

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About This Book

A sustained polemic against free-market wage labor and abolitionist critique, arguing that capital, credit, and professional privilege systematically exploit workers more than legalized servitude. The author surveys historical, economic, legal, and moral examples to challenge liberal reforms, free trade, and philanthropic remedies, and to defend a paternalistic, coercive social order as promoting stability, family cohesion, and moral discipline. Chapters analyze labor, capital, taxation, poor laws, revolutions, religion, and political theory to show how various isms and industrial arrangements produce poverty and social disorder, concluding that hierarchical property relations and enforced subordination better preserve public order than unfettered individualism.

About the Author

Fitzhugh, George portrait

George Fitzhugh

George Fitzhugh was an American social theorist and writer, best known for his controversial views on slavery and social structure in the antebellum South. His most notable work, "Cannibals All! or, Slaves without Masters," published in 1857, argues that slavery is a more humane and beneficial system than free labor. Fitzhugh's writings reflect the pro-slavery ideology of his time, challenging the prevailing abolitionist sentiments. He sought to justify the institution of slavery by presenting it as a form of social order that provided stability and care for the enslaved. His works contribute to the complex discourse surrounding slavery and its moral implications in American history.

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