
"While losing neither objectivity nor moral compass, Mark Tushnet skillfully navigates the murky waters of Southern judicial and legal logic. His inspired study highly deserves close and serious attention."--Bertram Wyatt-Brown, author of The Shaping of Southern Culture: Honor, Grace, and War, 1760-1880s
"More than two decades ago, Tushnet ignited the field of slave law studies with his provocative and thoughtful overview of the subject, The American Law of Slavery, 1810-1860. Now he has given us the first book-length study of a classic American slave case. Comprehensive and insightful, it merits the attention of legal scholars, historians, and non-specialists alike."--Timothy S. Huebner, author of The Southern Judicial Tradition
"The virtues of [this book] are considerable. Perhaps most signal of these is Tushnet's decision to analyze rather than moralize. . . . Along the way, we come to better understand the roles of the common law, statutes, and non-legal institutions in slavery's practice."--Law and History Review
"A notable contribution to the literature on slavery."--Southern Historian
"Tushnet teases from State v. Mann a remarkable amount of insight into the lives of masters and slaves in the antebellum South."--The Federal Lawyer