Maroon Movements Against Empire

IF 1 Q3 SOCIOLOGY
C. Eddins
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Marronnage, or escape from slavery, was a longue-durée form of resistance to slavery in Haiti and was also, as Sylvia Wynter argues, a “dialectical response to the capitalist plantation system”—a system that aimed to deny humanity, sever social and cultural ties, and commodified people and their labor power. This article, as well as works by others such as Cedric Robinson (1983), Sylvia Wynter (n.d.), and Jean Casimir (2020), argues that marronnage was a fundamentally anti-capitalist mode of resistance, socio-political critique, and grassroots mobilizing. In the immediate moments when enslaved people fled plantations, they reclaimed possession of themselves and other tangible and intangible resources, such as their time, social relationships, forms of knowledge, and labor skills that enslavers stole from them. When maroons re-appropriated resources and mobilized themselves, they challenged and subverted colonial plantation structures, contributing to the downfall of both Spanish and French imperial slaveries in Haiti. During and after the Haitian Revolution of 1791–1804, Africa-born rebels and maroons were central to the mobilizing structures that successfully fought to abolish slavery and overturn colonialism—representing an astounding rupture to the prevailing Atlantic world-system that was dependent upon enslaved labor. Even after the post-independence Haitian government replicated aspects of the colonial administration, as Casimir (2020) points out, the formerly enslaved masses of Haiti organized themselves into communal social arrangements that prioritized subsistence labor and extended kin networks, and continued to rely on marronnage to protest exploitative economic practices. This article explores the trajectory of marronnage in Haiti as a continuous struggle, emphasizing the ways that it exposed the violence, exploitation, and oppression inherently embedded in the Atlantic world-system, and exposed the limits of the governing Haitian states.
黑人反帝国运动
Marronnage,即逃离奴隶制,是海地长期反抗奴隶制的一种形式,正如西尔维娅·温特所说,也是“对资本主义种植园制度的辩证回应”——这种制度旨在否认人性,切断社会和文化联系,并将人民及其劳动力商品化。本文以及塞德里克·罗宾逊(Cedric Robinson, 1983)、西尔维娅·温特(Sylvia Wynter,未出版日期)和让·卡西米尔(Jean Casimir, 2020)等人的著作认为,marronage从根本上来说是一种反资本主义的抵抗、社会政治批判和基层动员模式。在被奴役的人逃离种植园的瞬间,他们重新拥有了自己和其他有形和无形的资源,比如他们的时间、社会关系、知识形式和奴隶从他们那里偷走的劳动技能。当黑人重新占用资源并动员起来时,他们挑战和颠覆了殖民种植园结构,促成了西班牙和法国帝国在海地的奴隶制的垮台。在1791年至1804年的海地革命期间和之后,非洲出生的反叛者和逃亡者是成功废除奴隶制和推翻殖民主义的动员结构的核心,这代表了对依赖奴役劳工的主流大西洋世界体系的惊人突破。正如卡西米尔(Casimir, 2020)所指出的那样,即使在独立后的海地政府复制了殖民政府的各个方面,海地以前被奴役的群众也将自己组织成公共社会安排,优先考虑维持生计的劳动和扩大亲属网络,并继续依靠婚姻来抗议剥削性的经济实践。这篇文章探讨了海地婚姻作为一场持续斗争的轨迹,强调了它暴露了大西洋世界体系中固有的暴力、剥削和压迫的方式,并暴露了海地国家执政的局限性。
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来源期刊
Journal of World-Systems Research
Journal of World-Systems Research Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
30 weeks
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