slave market
Noun: 1. A marketplace where slaves were auctioned off: This term historically refers to a specific location where enslaved people were bought and sold as property, typically through public auctions. It is most strongly associated with the practice in the southern United States prior to the American Civil War. 2. A situation or context where people are treated as commodities: By extension, this term can be used metaphorically to describe an environment where individuals have very little autonomy and are exploited, often for labor, in a manner reminiscent of historical slavery.
- Noun (Historical/Literal):
- The old town square once served as a slave market.
- Archaeologists are studying the site of a former slave market.
- Noun (Metaphorical):
- The recruiter described the exploitative industry as a modern-day slave market.
- Critics argue that some temporary employment agencies operate like a slave market.
- Used as a modifier: The term can function attributively to describe related concepts.
- The city's slave market history is a dark chapter in its past.
- They published a study on slave market economies.
- Slave auction (n): A sale event where slaves were sold to the highest bidder; a key activity within a slave market.
- Slave trade (n): The broader business of capturing, transporting, and selling enslaved people.
- Auction block (specifically the platform from which slaves were sold).
- Human marketplace (a more general, modern term for contexts of extreme exploitation).
The primary meaning is historical and carries immense weight due to its association with the atrocities of slavery. Its metaphorical use is powerful and critical, intended to highlight severe exploitation, but must be employed with sensitivity given the historical context. It is not a casual term for any difficult job market.
- a marketplace where slaves were auctioned off (especially in the southern United States before the American Civil War)