Skip To Content

News & Events

Chris Gismondi: Lunch & Learn

Join Slavery North for a Lunch & Learn Fellow Talk

Chris Gismondi (Fall 2024 PhD Student Fellow) will present a talk entitled: Gender, Family, and Gradual Abolition in Upper Canada and Northern Slavery, 1760-1833

In person:
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
12 noon-1pm
E501 Tower Room, South College
UMass Amherst
150 Hicks Way, Amherst, MA 01003

Online via Zoom:
12 noon-1pm Eastern Time
https://umass-amherst.zoom.us/j/98440731797?pwd=G2EemubdiL1v2D8alCpmFCnAN5sFGe.1
Meeting ID: 984 4073 1797
Passcode: north

Fugitive slave advertisement for Bet, 1818
“Notice. RAN away,” Bet and her son fleeing R. Leavens, Kingston Gazette, page 2, Tuesday, 13 October 1818: Ontario Community Newspaper Portal (online), https://news.ourontario.ca/97046/data?n=6.

About the talk:
This talk aims to unpack the uniqueness of northern slavery and resistance in Loyalist Upper Canada by analyzing enslaved family life through a gendered and decolonial feminist perspective with comparative analysis of other slave-minority demographic spaces. Focusing on reproduction, family, and defiance, I extend the study of slave resistance to northern slavery where bondspeople mobilized against slavery in quotidian ways. I examine how gender and family were exploited throughout northern slavery and the age of abolition specifically via gradual emancipation laws. Enslaved women’s reproductive potential via indentured children was legislated as the transitional process to freedom, which challenges the understanding of women and children as marginal to northern, slave minority-demographic spaces during the age of gradual abolition. Flashes of enslaved people’s everyday tenacity and bravery exist in a hostile, unfinished, and intentionally partial archive.

Chris Gismondi portrait
Chris Gismondi, Slavery North, PhD Student Fellow, Fall 2024

About Chris Gismondi:
Chris Gismondi is a PhD candidate in the History Department at the University of New Brunswick and a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada awarded art history scholar and curator. He is a PhD Student Fellow of the Slavery North Initiative at UMass Amherst.

Stay informed and read the latest news today

There is no other dedicated, specialized initiative of this kind in the world. Let us tell you more about our ground-breaking work.

Doctor Charmaine A. Nelson

Dr. Charmaine A. Nelson Director & Provost Professor of Art History


Is supported in this work by wonderful Research Assistants, an esteemed Advisory Board, affiliated centres, and dedicated staff at the University of Massachusetts.

Find out more

Have a Question?


Send us a message.

Contact

back to
top