Daniel Mcgregor

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The “social death” of the slave, whereby a slave is forever separated from all previously recognized social relationships, together with the overall cruelty and inhumanity associated with being reduced to human property, could not be mitigated by their ambiguous incorporation into the master’s household, nor by the language of fraternal love and other fictive-kinship rhetoric.
Onesimus Our Brother: Reading Religion, Race, and Culture in Philemon (Paul in Critical Contexts)
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