The World That Fear Made: Slave Revolts and Conspiracy Scares in Early America

Placeholder author icon
By Jason T. Sharples *10

Published June 23, 2020

In The World That Fear Made: Slave Revolts and Conspiracy Scares in Early America (University of Pennsylvania Press), Jason T. Sharples *10 argues that colonial officials’ reports of suppressing insurrections in their planning stages were not wholly truthful and ultimately served political goals of bolstering Americans’ racial fear. Sharples suggests that the historical narratives surrounding these conspiracy scares do not align with the reality of slave revolts, indicating that confessions from tortured slaves were more likely tools for colonial officials’ designs.

Paw in print

Image
Three Princeton students stand outside East Pyne, modeling preppy clothing by JPress.
The Latest Issue

June 2026

Ivy Style finds new life; University ‘pauses’ Trenton program; Princeton’s dating culture.