Behind the "Big Houses" of the antebellum South existed a different
world, socially and architecturally, where slaves lived and worked. John
Michael Vlach explores the structures and spaces that formed the slaves'
environment. Through photographs and the words of former slaves, he
portrays the plantation landscape from the slaves' own point of view.
The plantation landscape was chiefly the creation of slaveholders, but
Vlach argues convincingly that slaves imbued this landscape with their
own meanings. Their subtle acts of appropriation constituted one of the
more effective strategies of slave resistance and one that provided a
locus for the formation of a distinctive African American culture in the
South.
Vlach has chosen more than 200 photographs and drawings from the
Historic American Buildings Survey--an archive that has been mined many
times for its images of the planters' residences but rarely for those of
slave dwellings. In a dramatic photographic tour, Vlach leads readers
through kitchens, smokehouses, dairies, barns and stables, and
overseers' houses, finally reaching the slave quarters. To evoke a
firsthand sense of what it was like to live and work in these spaces, he
includes excerpts from the moving testimonies of former slaves drawn
from the Federal Writers' Project collections.