Baartman, Sara

Clifton C. Crais
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Sara Baartman (also known as Saartje, Saartjie, or Sarah), a South African woman, was widely known on stage in England and France in the early 19th century, and subsequently internationally since then, as the “Hottentot Venus,” the Western racist fiction of the primitive, sexualized, black woman. Until the 21st century, scholars paradoxically paid more attention to the fiction than the actual person. Further research showed that Baartman was born on the colonial frontier in the 1770s and lived in Cape Town in conditions similar to urban slavery from the 1790s through 1810, when she was taken to London. There and later in the English countryside and in Ireland, she was displayed on stage. In 1814, she was sold to an animal trainer in Paris who forced her to display herself to restaurant patrons and who possibly also forced her into prostitution. George Cuvier, the founder of Comparative Anatomy, interviewed her and, after her death in December 1815, performed an autopsy, not to discover the cause of death but to see if her body, literally, was the connection between humankind and animals. The Museum of Man in Paris displayed a nude plaster cast of Baartman’s body until the 1970s. Following the coming of democracy to South Africa, activists petitioned to bring Baartman’s remains home, and they were buried on South African National Women’s Day, August 1, 2002, as part of a nationally televised ceremony. Her burial site is in Hankey, Eastern Cape.
萨拉·巴特曼(Sara Baartman,也被称为Saartje、Saartjie或Sarah)是一名南非女性,19世纪初在英国和法国的舞台上广为人知,此后在国际舞台上被称为“霍屯都的维纳斯”,这是西方种族主义小说中对原始的、性感的黑人女性的描述。直到21世纪,学者们对小说的关注多于对真人的关注,这是自相矛盾的。进一步的研究表明,巴特曼于18世纪70年代出生在殖民地边境,从18世纪90年代到1810年,她一直生活在开普敦,生活条件类似于城市奴隶制。1810年,她被带到伦敦。在那里,以及后来在英国乡村和爱尔兰,她被展示在舞台上。1814年,她被卖给了巴黎的一名驯兽师,这名驯兽师强迫她向餐馆的顾客展示自己,并可能强迫她卖淫。比较解剖学的创始人乔治·居维叶(George Cuvier)采访了她,并在她于1815年12月去世后对她进行了尸检,不是为了发现死亡原因,而是想看看她的身体是否真的是人类和动物之间的联系。直到20世纪70年代,巴黎人类博物馆才展出了巴特曼的裸体石膏模型。随着南非民主的到来,活动人士请愿将巴特曼的遗体带回家,并于2002年8月1日南非妇女节安葬,作为全国电视直播仪式的一部分。她的墓地在东开普省的汉基。
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