Black Tradeswomen and the Making of a Taste Culture in Lower Louisiana

IF 0.2 Q2 HISTORY
Jessica Blake
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT:Black tradeswomen – both enslaved and free African women and those of African descent – played key economic roles in lower Louisiana during the late eighteenth century. This article uses the life of Jeannette, an enslaved-turned-free negra, as a case study of a women who advertised Atlantic ingredients and cloth through West African customs and framework, and in doing so, popularized Afro-Atlantic material culture in North America. Enslaved in 1749 at the Bight of Benin, West Africa, Jeannette was sent by enslavers to Saint Pierre, Martinique, and then New Orleans, Louisiana, during which time she hired out as a tradeswoman. For much of her life, Jeannette fought against enslavement and negotiated for a place in the marketplace, a space that allowed her more access to autonomy and economic resources than plantation work. Examining personal estate inventories and bills of receipt of residents of French, Spanish, and African descent, it becomes clear that she and others found profit-making opportunities both in the marketplace and in the sale of Afro-Atlantic material cultures.
下路易斯安那州黑人女商人与品味文化的形成
摘要:18世纪末,黑人女商人——包括被奴役和自由的非洲妇女以及非洲裔妇女——在下路易斯安那州扮演着重要的经济角色。这篇文章以Jeannette这个从奴隶到自由的黑人的生活为例,研究了一个女人通过西非的习俗和框架来宣传大西洋的原料和布料,从而在北美推广了非洲-大西洋的物质文化。1749年,珍妮特在西非贝宁湾被奴役,被奴隶们送到马提尼克岛的圣皮埃尔,然后是路易斯安那州的新奥尔良,在此期间她受雇做商人。珍妮特一生中的大部分时间都在与奴隶制作斗争,并为在市场上争取一席之地而进行谈判,这是一个让她比种植园工作更容易获得自主权和经济资源的空间。通过检查法国、西班牙和非洲裔居民的个人财产清单和收据,很明显,她和其他人在市场和非大西洋物质文化的销售中都找到了赚钱的机会。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
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