Slavery, Indentureship, and Women’s Labor

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A01=Estherine G. H. Adams
Author_Estherine G. H. Adams
Category=JBSF1
Category=JBSL
Category=JKVP
Category=NHK
coercion
colonial punishment
control
convicts
defeminization
Empire prisons
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
female resistance
forced unpaid labour systems
forthcoming
gendered incarceration
Georgetown
governance
hierarchies
historical criminology
immigration
imperial policy
institutional violence
legal systems
masculinization
order
penal colonies
plantation economy
post-emancipation society
racialized justice
records analysis
seawall
subaltern ladies
survival strategies
United Kingdom UK

Product details

  • ISBN 9781496864109
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Slavery, Indentureship, and Women’s Labor: Early British Guiana’s Jails uncovers the overlooked histories of incarcerated women in colonial British Guiana, revealing how prisons evolved from sites of punishment into tools of labor extraction. Spanning the period from slavery through the end of indentureship, this groundbreaking study explores how the colonial state exploited the labor of imprisoned women—both African and immigrant—within a broader system of racial, gendered, and economic control.

Drawing on lived experiences as well as rich archival research from Guyana and the UK, the book challenges the conventional binary of slave versus free labor by showing how incarceration became a strategic method of coercing women into unpaid public and plantation work, monetizing the labor of incarcerated individuals to manage and manipulate the workforce in service of colonial economic interests. It also exposes the deliberate masculinization of imprisoned women to justify their use in physically demanding labor, stripping them of femininity to render their bodies more exploitable.

Organized into four thematic chapters, the book examines the transformation of the colonial prison system, the gendered nature of prison labor and resistance, the racialization of criminality, and the expansion of penal infrastructure in tandem with immigration schemes. Timely and deeply researched, this work offers new insight into the intersections of gender, race, labor, and carcerality in the Caribbean, appealing to readers interested in the roots of contemporary conversations around incarceration and historical injustice.

Estherine G. H. Adams is director of the International Centre of Excellence for History, Identities, Populations and Temporalities at the University of Guyana. Adams has contributed to several major research initiatives, including the British Academy–funded project History and Security Sector Reform: Crime and Punishment in British Colonial Guyana, 1814–1966 and the ESRC Global Challenges Research Fund project Mental, Neurological, and Substance Abuse Disorders in Guyana’s Jails: 1825 to the Present Day. Her work has appeared in such journals as Slavery and Abolition and Labour History. Adams was awarded the 2023 Guyana Prize for Literature in the nonfiction category and the 2025 Edna Ryan Prize for Best Article in Women’s History from the Australian Society for the Study of Labour History.

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