“Everybody Wants to Be a Merchant”

Cécile Vidal
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Abstract

This chapter claims that commerce contributed more than any other activity to alleviating the racial divide in French New Orleans. On the one hand, participation in the market was to a large extent determined by status, race, class, and gender; on the other, the surge in commercial exchanges provided a set of circumstances in which social and racial boundaries were more easily negotiated. Yet whites were the ones who benefited the most from this situation: by the end of the French period a powerful corporate body of self-identified merchants and traders of European descent had emerged, and they were able to challenge the traditional conception of commerce as an infamous occupation. In contrast, whereas a few slaves managed to purchase their freedom thanks to their participation in an informal economy, they were unable to weaken the long-lasting association whites made between slavery and dishonor.
“每个人都想成为商人”
本章声称,商业比其他任何活动都更有助于缓解法属新奥尔良的种族分裂。一方面,市场的参与在很大程度上取决于地位、种族、阶级和性别;另一方面,商业交流的激增提供了一系列环境,使社会和种族界限更容易谈判。然而,白人是这种情况的最大受益者:到法国时期结束时,一个由自称为欧洲商人和贸易商的强大团体出现了,他们能够挑战传统观念,即商业是一种臭名昭着的职业。相比之下,尽管少数奴隶通过参与非正式经济而获得了自由,但他们无法削弱白人在奴隶制和耻辱之间建立的长期联系。
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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