This was the first comprehensive analysis of slavery in early colonial
South Africa under the Dutch East India Company (1652-1795) when it was
published in 1985. Based on archival research in Britain, the
Netherlands and South Africa, it examines the nature of Cape slavery
with reference to the literature on other slave societies. Dr Worden
shows how the slave economy developed in town and countryside, and
discusses the dynamics of the slave market, the growth of land
concentration, the harsh life on the farm, and the developing
polarisation of rural race relations. He analyses the relation of fear
and brutality in small farming communities and demonstrates that,
contrary to previous assumptions, small-scale slavery produced
conditions as severe as those experienced in the large-scale
slave-holding systems of the Deep South. This important study
contributes to an understanding of the development of South African
colonial society and to comparative slave studies.