Work, Status, and Social Mobility

W. L. Andrews
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Abstract

Chapter 2 contains a comprehensive examination of the work and socioeconomic mobility of mid-century narrators while they were still enslaved. The work that narrators did before they achieved freedom and the leverage and mobility that many gained from that work significantly affected their self-estimates and their views of other slaves as well as slaveholders and nonslaveholders. Most mid-century narratives were produced by former skilled slaves, whose stories often dramatize how personal self-respect and pride, earned privileges, and mounting aspirations for opportunities and autonomy led to various kinds of resistance to control and, eventually, to freedom. This chapter also examines the least studied of the mid-century narratives, those by former agricultural workers (field hands) to explore their perspectives on work, exploitation, and freedom. The chapter concludes by examining the roles of paternalism, privilege, and intraracial—particularly family—relationships in the early life of Frederick Douglass.
工作、地位和社会流动
第二章全面考察了中世纪叙述者在被奴役时的工作和社会经济流动性。叙述者在获得自由之前所做的工作以及他们从中获得的影响力和流动性极大地影响了他们的自我评估以及他们对其他奴隶以及奴隶主和非奴隶主的看法。大多数世纪中叶的故事都是由曾经的熟练奴隶创作的,他们的故事经常戏剧化地描述个人的自尊和骄傲,赢得的特权,以及对机会和自治的日益增长的渴望如何导致对控制的各种抵抗,并最终走向自由。本章还考察了本世纪中叶研究最少的叙述,即前农业工人(田间工人)的叙述,以探索他们对工作、剥削和自由的看法。本章最后考察了家长作风、特权和种族内部——尤其是家庭关系——在弗雷德里克·道格拉斯早期生活中的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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