迈向印度洋和亚洲海上奴隶贸易数据库:概念、经验和模型的探索

S. S. Nicolaas, M. V. Rossum, U. Bosma
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引用次数: 2

摘要

虽然在过去的三十年中,跨大西洋奴隶贸易数据库(TASTD)已经动员了惊人的学术力量,但亚洲奴隶贸易的历史迄今仍不发达。尽管大量的学术文章表明,从近代早期一直到19世纪,奴隶制和奴隶贸易在整个亚洲沿海地区广泛存在,但对印度洋奴隶贸易的估计仍然是尝试性的,而且往往特别关注(西)印度洋地区。自2015年以来,一个国际研究小组聚集在一起,致力于加强对亚洲和东非奴隶贸易的研究。本文讨论了该小组的一项核心活动,即印度洋和海上亚洲奴隶贸易数据库(ESTA)的开发,该数据库由国际社会历史研究所主办,与波恩依赖与奴隶制研究中心、林奈大学和里昂高等教育学院密切合作。我们探索和评估跨大西洋奴隶贸易数据库在亚洲背景下的适用性。随后,我们确定了印度洋和印度尼西亚群岛奴隶贸易来源和模式的特殊性,以及它们对可能的数据模型设计的影响。文章进一步强调ESTA数据库的重要性,以比较研究跨越殖民列强,地方和全球奴隶制系统,在印度洋,海事亚洲世界范围内更广泛和更明确的“区域”,甚至超越跨大西洋奴隶贸易。建立一个全面的印度洋和印度尼西亚群岛数据库的一个重要目标是记录和重建奴隶贸易,特别是考虑到全球远距离奴隶贸易与当地奴隶制和强迫劳动制度的纠缠。本文指出了历史和史学背景探索中的几个挑战,并提出并评估了两种数据库模型,最后总结了取得的进展和未来的挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Towards an Indian Ocean and Maritime Asia Slave Trade Database: An Exploration of Concepts, Lessons and Models
While over the last three decades the Transatlantic Slave Trade Database (TASTD) has mobilized an astounding scholarly energy, the history of the slave trade in Asia has so far remained underdeveloped. Although numerous scholarly articles have indicated the widespread presence of slavery and the slave trade throughout maritime Asia from the early modern period well into the 19th century, estimates for the slave trade in the Indian Ocean are still tentative, and tend to focus especially on the (western) Indian Ocean region. Since 2015 an international group of researchers has come together to work towards consolidating research on the slave trade in Asia and East Africa. This article discusses a core activity of this group, namely the development of the Indian Ocean and Maritime Asia Slave Trade Database (ESTA) which is hosted at the International Institute of Social History in close collaboration with the Bonn Center for Dependency and Slavery Studies, Linnaeus University and ENS Lyon. We explore and evaluate the applicability of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database to the Asian context. We subsequently identify the specificities of the Indian Ocean and Indonesian Archipelago sources and patterns of slave trading, and their implications for possible datamodel designs. The article further underlines the importance of the ESTA database for comparative research reaching across colonial powers, local and global systems of slavery, across wider-ranging and more strongly defined ‘regions’ within the Indian Ocean Maritime Asia world, and even beyond to the transatlantic slave trade. A vital aim in the construction of a comprehensive Indian Ocean and Indonesian Archipelago database is the recording and reconstruction of the slave trade, especially in light of the entanglements of global long-distance slave trading with local systems of slavery and forced labour. The article identifies several challenges in the exploration of the historical and historiographic contexts and proposes and evaluates two database models, concluding with the advances made and the challenges ahead.
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