The Keller Plantation and the Racial Plot of Disability History in the U.S.

Camille Owens
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Abstract

Between the popularization of Helen Keller’s autobiography, The Story of My Life (1903), and the cinematic dramatization of The Miracle Worker (1962), scenes of Keller’s early life and education have served as touchstones through which nondisabled Americans have imagined disability’s history and narrowed its political possibilities: toward the conditional dispersal of access based on individual acts of overcoming. Yet, if Keller’s story has played an outsize role in consolidating disability’s history and politics, it is also a site of profound racial occlusion. The context of Keller’s early life on the Keller plantation in Tuscumbia, Alabama is largely absent from her popular legacy. With the disappearance of this context, the black people who facilitated Keller’s disabled coming of age have also fallen away, as well as the history of slavery and Indigenous removal that made her life story possible. This void—at the locus of perhaps the most hegemonic origin story of American disability history—is cause for critical race inquiry. This essay traces the relationship between the material background of Keller’s autobiography and its imaginative foreground; from her family’s role in settler conquest and slavery in the Alabama Muscle Shoals, to Keller’s status as a transcendent icon of disability. Reading between the plantation and the plot of Keller’s Story while locating both beside the Tennessee River’s shoals, this essay turns to theories of cartography and narrative authored by Sylvia Wynter and Tiffany Lethabo King for insight into a critical paradox: the antiblack and anti-Indigenous structure of ableism, and the whiteness of disabled representation. By resituating Keller’s iconicity in relation to conquest, slavery, and their afterlives, this essay locates the problems and possibilities of narrating black and Indigenous disability history from the Keller plantation’s surround. Yet, while invested in unsettling the landscape, I neither recover these stories nor entomb them as untellable. Instead, I write toward further investment in black and Indigenous counter-archives that have complicated who has been—and who remains—the imaginable and politically traction-able subject of disability.
凯勒种植园与美国残疾人历史的种族情节
在海伦·凯勒自传《我的故事》(1903)的普及和《奇迹工作者》(1962)的电影改编之间,凯勒早年生活和教育的场景已经成为试金石,非残疾人美国人通过它来想象残疾的历史,并缩小其政治可能性:朝着基于个人克服行为的有条件的渠道扩散。然而,如果说凯勒的故事在巩固残疾人的历史和政治方面发挥了巨大的作用,那么它也是一个深刻的种族隔离的场所。凯勒早年在阿拉巴马州图斯坎比亚的凯勒种植园生活的背景,在她广受欢迎的遗产中基本上是缺失的。随着这种背景的消失,帮助凯勒残疾成人的黑人也消失了,奴隶制和土著迁移的历史也使她的生活故事成为可能。这一空白——或许是美国残疾史上最具霸权性的起源故事——是进行批判性种族调查的原因。本文追溯了凯勒自传的物质背景与其想象前景之间的关系;从她的家庭在阿拉巴马州肌肉浅滩征服定居者和奴隶制中所扮演的角色,到凯勒作为残疾人的卓越象征的地位。这篇文章在种植园和凯勒故事的情节之间阅读,同时位于田纳西河的浅滩旁,转向西尔维娅·温特和蒂芙尼·莱瑟博·金的地图和叙事理论,以洞察一个关键的悖论:反黑人和反土著的残疾主义结构,以及残疾人代表的白人。通过对凯勒在征服、奴隶制和他们的死后生活方面的象征性的反思,本文定位了在凯勒种植园周围叙述黑人和土著残疾人历史的问题和可能性。然而,尽管我投入了大量精力来扰乱景观,但我既没有恢复这些故事,也没有把它们埋葬为不可诉说的故事。相反,我写的是对黑人和土著反档案的进一步投资,这些档案使谁曾经是——以及谁仍然是——可以想象和政治上可吸引的残疾主题变得复杂。
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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