Arielle Walters - Peonage: Slavery By Another Name



Annotated Bibliography“Peonage:Slavery By Another Name”Primary SourcesPictures Franklin, Stuart. "Magnum Photos." Magnum Photos. N.p., 2007. Web.This picture shows a victim of chattel slavery.Gasbarre, Kristine. "A Crime So Monstrous–Busted Halo’s Series on Modern Day Slavery." BustedHalo RSS. N.p., 29 Apr. 2009. Web.This picture depicts a young woman in a trafficking ad. Hine, Lewis. "The History Place - Child Labor in America: Investigative Photos of Lewis Hine." The History Place - Child Labor in America: Investigative Photos of Lewis Hine. N.p., 1908. Web.Photos of child labour were used from this site.Jennings. "Forced Marriages Latest News on Forced Marriages Read. Forced Marriages in India." Forced Marriages in India. N.p., 30 Nov. 2013. Web. 12 Dec. 2013.Photos of force marriage cartoons.Terry. "Child Labour." Terry The Aid Worker RSS. N.p., 5 July 2011. Web.This is a picture of child labour.Secondary SourcesDocumentaryBernard, Sheila C. "PBS Film." Slavery By Another Name. Catherine Allan and Douglas Blackmon, 12 Feb. 2012. Web. This documentary is based on Douglas Blackmon's 2009 Pulitzer Prize-winning book. Slavery by Another Name challenges the belief that slavery ended with Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation of 1863. The documentary recounts how in the Post-Civil War years, new forms of forced labor emerged in southern America, keeping hundreds of thousands of African Americans in bondage, trapping them in a persisting system until World War II.WebsiteBales, Kevin. "About Slavery - Free the Slaves." About Slavery - Free the Slaves. N.p., 2007. Web.This site was used to define and measure the boundaries of slavery.Bokova, Irina. "Modern Forms of Slavery | United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization." Modern Forms of Slavery | United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. UNESCO, 4 Nov. 1946. Web. This site focuses on the modern forms of slavery. It also views how human rights and dignity were impacted through each form of slavery.Littlefield, Daniel C. “The Varieties of Slave Labor.” Freedom’s Story, TeacherServe?. National Humanities Center. Jan. 2000. Web. Littlefield talks on the varieties of slave labor and how it revolved. He also mentioned the influence time period and geology had on slave labor.Simpson, Brooks. "Research Exercise: The Rights Of Slaves." Crossroads. N.p., 15 June 2011. Web.This website spoke on the rights that slaves had.Thomas, Albert. "Forced Labour." Forced Labour. N.p., 1919. Web. This website speaks on the different types of forced labor and the groups they target. Statistics on U.S. forced labor is used to help make the point that forced labor is still present in todays society. ................
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