记住棉花螺旋起子:跨种族的滨水劳工和水手俱乐部的发展

IF 0.2 1区 艺术学 N/A MUSIC
Gibb Schreffler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

围绕着水手工作歌曲chanties(俗称“海上棚屋”)的讨论,普遍存在的白人种族框架意味着,讨论往往会忽视或最小化这些歌曲的非裔美国人遗产。另外,在海洋空间框架内进行讨论的规范性方法也挑战了对机遇的修订和更公正的历史叙述。我们可以通过重新进入讨论的框架来克服这些挑战,讨论的框架是邻近的海岸劳工及其参与者——棉花螺旋工。在整个19世纪,美国的棉花出口贸易依赖于螺丝起子在港口的船上装载棉花包的工作。虽然在这个行业的形成时期,所有的螺丝匠都是黑人,但到本世纪中叶,白人也加入了这个行业。这造成了一个不寻常的情况,不仅是两个种族群体从事同样的劳动,而且是白人进入并适应已经建立的“黑人”劳动环境。重要的是,从他们的职业出现开始,螺丝工就练习唱歌来协调他们的劳动。我认为,那些季节性地来做螺丝工的白人水手被迫适应了现有的非裔美国人的工作歌曲,从而获得了物质和概念基础,以发展船上的工作歌曲,最被人们记住的是“chanties”。作为有史以来第一次对被遗忘的螺旋人歌唱的持续阐述,这篇文章既质疑了流行叙事对白人航海的独家代理权,也质疑了将非裔美国人遗产作为一种“影响”而不是吟唱流派的基础的学术讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Remembering the Cotton Screwmen: Inter-racial Waterfront Labor and the Development of Sailors’ Chanties
The prevailing white racial frame surrounding discourse on the sailor work songs called chanties (popularly, “sea shanties”) means that discussions tend to ignore or minimize these songs’ African American heritage. Articulating revised and more just historical narratives of chanties is additionally challenged by the normative approach of setting discussions within the spatial frame of the sea. We may overcome these challenges by recentering the frame of discussion on an adjacently situated space of shoreside labor and its actors, cotton screwmen. Throughout the nineteenth century, the United States’ cotton export trade depended upon screwmen's work of stowing cotton bales aboard ships in port. Although all screwmen were Black men during the profession's formative period, by mid-century, white men had joined the profession in complementary proportion. This created an unusual case, not only of both racial groups performing the same labor but also of white men entering and accommodating to an already-established “Black” labor environment. Importantly, from the advent of their profession, screwmen practiced singing to coordinate their labor. I argue that white sailors who came to work seasonally as screwmen were compelled to acculturate to existing African American work singing, and thus acquired the material and conceptual bases to develop the shipboard work songs best remembered as “chanties.” As the first ever sustained exposition of screwmen's forgotten singing, this essay contests both popular narratives’ granting of exclusive agency to white seafaring and academic discussions that tokenize African American heritage as an “influence” rather than the chanty genre's foundation.
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CiteScore
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