{"title":"Managing ‘Old Mammy’, Making ‘Mother Wit’: Older Enslaved Women, Efficiency, and Survival on the Plantation","authors":"L. DeMarco","doi":"10.1080/0144039X.2023.2192203","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article analyzes the values of older enslaved women on cotton and sugar plantations in the antebellum lower Mississippi Valley. Planters derived efficiency value from aged enslaved women’s medical knowledge, domestic skills, and care-taking skills, believing that these qualities could be used to create maximally productive workforces. This meaning that planters and overseers placed on some older women was a perversion of value these women often held within enslaved communities. Enslaved people valued medical knowledge and a specific kind of social tact known as ‘Mother Wit’ because they were crucial tools for surviving slavery and resisting its degrading effects. The article utilizes plantation business records, agricultural trade publications, interviews with formerly enslaved people, and a composite and speculative methodology akin to Marisa J. Fuentes’ approach to ‘archival fragments’. It builds on the work of historians of enslaved aging as well as scholarship in the history of plantation medicine and the history of capitalism and slavery. Ultimately, this research demonstrates that there were complex understandings of aging on the plantation to both enslavers and the enslaved.","PeriodicalId":46405,"journal":{"name":"Slavery & Abolition","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Slavery & Abolition","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/0144039X.2023.2192203","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
ABSTRACT This article analyzes the values of older enslaved women on cotton and sugar plantations in the antebellum lower Mississippi Valley. Planters derived efficiency value from aged enslaved women’s medical knowledge, domestic skills, and care-taking skills, believing that these qualities could be used to create maximally productive workforces. This meaning that planters and overseers placed on some older women was a perversion of value these women often held within enslaved communities. Enslaved people valued medical knowledge and a specific kind of social tact known as ‘Mother Wit’ because they were crucial tools for surviving slavery and resisting its degrading effects. The article utilizes plantation business records, agricultural trade publications, interviews with formerly enslaved people, and a composite and speculative methodology akin to Marisa J. Fuentes’ approach to ‘archival fragments’. It builds on the work of historians of enslaved aging as well as scholarship in the history of plantation medicine and the history of capitalism and slavery. Ultimately, this research demonstrates that there were complex understandings of aging on the plantation to both enslavers and the enslaved.
本文分析了内战前密西西比河谷下游棉花和甘蔗种植园的老年奴隶妇女的价值。种植园主从被奴役的老年妇女的医学知识、家务技能和护理技能中获得了效率价值,他们相信这些品质可以用来创造最大限度的生产力劳动力。种植园主和监工对一些老年妇女施加的这种意义是对这些妇女在被奴役的社区中通常持有的价值的曲解。被奴役的人重视医学知识和一种被称为“机智母亲”的特殊社会机智,因为它们是在奴隶制中生存和抵抗其堕落影响的关键工具。这篇文章利用了种植园的商业记录、农业贸易出版物、对以前被奴役的人的采访,以及一种类似于玛丽莎·j·富恩特斯(Marisa J. Fuentes)对“档案碎片”的方法的综合和推测方法。它建立在奴隶老龄化历史学家的工作基础上,也建立在种植园医学史、资本主义和奴隶制历史方面的学术研究基础上。最终,本研究表明,在种植园上,奴隶和奴隶对衰老都有复杂的理解。