"All Ways Open to all Men": Anthony Trollope and Mary Seacole in The Central American Transit Zones

IF 0.2 2区 文学 N/A LITERATURE
ELH Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.1353/elh.2023.0005
Dennis M. Hogan
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Abstract

Abstract:This article focuses on two writers whose work on Panama and Nicaragua confronts Britain's supersession by the United States as the hegemonic power in Central America. Reading the nurse and memoirist Mary Seacole and the novelist and civil servant Anthony Trollope, I argue that these British subjects both understood the fate of the Empire as tied to that of the Central American transit zones, particularly the transoceanic route across Panama. They differed, however, on whom waning British influence in Central America would benefit. While Trollope saw commercial and cultural continuity in an uninterrupted Anglo-American dominance of the hemisphere, Seacole, a Black Jamaican for whom the Empire functioned as a guarantor of political status within a larger colonial framework, worried that the United States would subject the region to its regime of strict racial separation. Taken together, these accounts suggest a surprising inversion of imperial identifications: Trollope evinces an informal imperialist's disdain for official entanglements, while Seacole emphasizes that her status as a British subject entails a duty on the part of the Empire to protect the region and its people from American rapaciousness.
“所有的道路对所有人开放”:安东尼·特罗洛普和玛丽·西科尔在中美洲过境区
摘要:本文关注的是两位作家,他们在巴拿马和尼加拉瓜问题上的作品对抗了美国在中美洲的霸权地位——英国被美国所取代。通过阅读护士兼回忆录作家玛丽·西科尔(Mary Seacole)和小说家兼公务员安东尼·特罗洛普(Anthony Trollope)的作品,我认为,这些英国臣子都明白,帝国的命运与中美洲过境区,尤其是穿越巴拿马的跨洋航线的命运息息相关。然而,他们在英国在中美洲逐渐减弱的影响力对谁有利的问题上存在分歧。特罗洛普看到了英美在西半球的不间断统治所带来的商业和文化上的连续性,而西科尔,一个牙买加黑人,对他来说,大英帝国在一个更大的殖民框架内扮演着政治地位的保证者的角色,担心美国将把该地区置于其严格的种族隔离制度之下。综合起来,这些叙述表明了帝国身份的惊人颠倒:特罗洛普表现了一个非正式的帝国主义者对官方纠缠的蔑视,而西科尔强调,她作为英国臣民的身份意味着帝国有责任保护该地区及其人民免受美国人的掠夺。
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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ELH
ELH LITERATURE-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
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