Published in 1974, Roll, Jordan, Roll is American historian Eugene Genoveseâs epic study of slavery in the United States in the late-eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It provides a nuanced understanding of the relationship between master and slave.
Slave owners saw it as their duty to limit slavesâ freedoms for their own good, as a father might deal with his child. But Genovese looked beyond this notion of paternalism to suggest the relationship was more complex. Slaves did not simply accept their lot passively. They used sophisticated techniques to surviveâan acceptance of some of the slave mastersâ demands combined with the ability to negotiate certain rightsâall the while maintaining their own sense of humanity through song and prayer.
Genoveseâs uncovering of these relationships caused controversy, because he refused to make simplistic moral claims that slaveholders were âbadâ and slaves were âgood.â
With Roll, Jordan, Roll, Genovese won the prestigious Bancroft Prize for American history writing and the book remains a key text on American slavery.