“…Epstein (2001) all seem to suggest, the 'ethos of slavery,' specifically its power discourse, held profound significance for racial, gender, and social perceptions in many societies that would fall outside of the traditional definition of a 'slave society'-where slavery formed the foundation of economic production, and the master-slave relationship served as the 'model for all social relations' (Berlin 1997, 8). In the case of Quito, not only did the Baroque concept of captivity (based fundamentally upon African slavery) help to order society, informing the construction of many social relations (Lane 2003), Quito also possessed the principal characteristics of typical mainland Spanish American slave societies: the emergence of Africans first within the urban centers of colonial power, an immediate (at times simultaneous) extension of African slave labor to the rural periphery, and the commingling of diverse racial and ethnic pools of laborers, enslaved, free and/or coerced (Bennett 2003, 14-15). For more on traditional definitions and characterizations of slave societies see Berlin (1998) and Genovese (1971).…”