The Mind of the Slave: The Limits of Ownership in Roman Law and Society
The Mind of the Slave: The Limits of Ownership in Roman Law and Society
by Nicole J. Giannella
University of Michigan Press, 2026 Cloth: 978-0-472-13365-9 | eISBN: 978-0-472-22240-7 (standard) Library of Congress Classification KJA2213.5.S53 Dewey Decimal Classification 342.37087
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
The Mind of the Slave untangles the double nature of slaves as property and as human beings under the law in the Roman world. As human beings, slaves had free will and legally recognized autonomy while acting for their owner. Although their autonomy was fundamental to the Roman economy, it had the potential to lead to insecurity in the day-to-day experiences of the owner and enslaved person. Will an enslaved agent decide to act in the best interest of their owner? To sell their secrets? To run away? These moments of insecurity are the subject of this book; they reveal an owner’s struggle to know the mind of the slave and to reconcile ownership over a reasoning, emotional, and purposive human being. Nicole J. Giannella argues that this reliance on the mind of the slave reveals fault lines in the ownership of the enslaved. This is where we can glimpse beyond the trappings of law and see the need for negotiation, incentives, and ultimately, the trust that the owner puts in their slave.
In order to place Roman jurists in conversation with both technical and literary sources, Giannella grounds this study in philology and argues that conceptions of the mind of the slave were at the heart of legal and cultural debates about the nature of slavery and ownership. It also contributes to a wider debate about selfhood and autonomy, since philosophers often used the figure of the slave as a representation of humanity as its limits.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Nicole J. Giannella is Assistant Professor of Classics at Cornell University.
REVIEWS
“The Mind of the Slave is impressive, both in its ambitions and in its results. This will be an important intervention in slavery studies and fits into a rising wave of scholarship aimed at exploring the viewpoint, subjectivity, and agency of the enslaved. The book should have a readership that stretches beyond Classics and ancient history to scholarly readers interested in broader questions of slavery and enslavement.”— Noel Lenski, Yale University
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Timeline of Jurists
Introduction Part One: New Slaves and New Owners
Evaluating Slaves
Sanity and the Slave Market
Part Two: The Life of the Slave
Slaves at Work
Corrupting Slaves
Part Three: The End of the Owner-Slave Relationship
Exits from Slavery
Epilogue: From Mind to Memory
Bibliography
Index
Index Locorum
Index of Persons and Places
Index of Terms
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.