残暴帝国:克里斯托弗-迈克尔-布莱克利(Christopher Michael Blakley)所著的《英国大西洋世界中被奴役的人和动物》(评论

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Rachael L. Pasierowska
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Pp. xiii, 236. $45.00, ISBN 978-0-8071-7886-7.) <p><em>Empire of Brutality: Enslaved People and Animals in the British Atlantic World</em> marks a refreshing watershed in the historiography of slavery. <strong>[End Page 600]</strong> Christopher Michael Blakley has penned the first full-length book that centers enslaved persons and slaveholders in the world of fauna and the transatlantic slave trade. Historians of both slavery and animals will find a rich study that covers differing geographical scales across West Africa and throughout the British Atlantic world in the 1700s. Blakley’s overarching argument focuses on the various ways white slaveholders intentionally attempted to strip enslaved Black persons of their humanity. The author further contends that such attempts were often futile because enslaved persons refused such treatment and that, instead, “they dared to imagine a world that recognized and reckoned with Black humanity in its fullness” (p. 150).</p> <p>His chapters follow an approach similar to many Atlantic slavery studies, beginning in Africa and then moving to the British Caribbean and North America, with their primary focus on the eighteenth-century British slave societies. The extensive archival research draws from an extensive wealth of sources, including advertisements for runaway enslaved persons, diaries, essays, inventories, letters, newspapers, plantation manuals, portraits, and the Royal African Company’s records, to demonstrate how colonial slaveholders held similar “racial attitudes among Europeans who equated people of African descent and livestock” (p. 89).</p> <p>While the author states that the study’s primary focus is on white attitudes toward Black people, there already exists an extensive historiography on travel narratives from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries regarding scientific racism. Where Blakley’s study enhances this literature is through an analysis of Africans’ knowledge of the animal world and how they utilized such information through the variables of trade. One interesting example is the employment of cowrie shells (from small mollusks) as currency between sub-Saharan Africans and European merchants. These shells, upon which the Royal African Company pinioned much of its transactions with African trading partners, illustrate African agency in crafting relationships between slavery and animals along the West African littoral. In this vein, chapters 4 and 5 are Blakley’s strongest, detailing how enslaved persons demonstrated autonomy against the system of slavery through interactions with fauna. In the Americas, white colonists’ continued efforts at dehumanization led to instances of enslaved persons neglecting, killing, and consuming their owners’ animals. Other enslaved people purloined horses to put a greater distance between themselves and enforced bondage, either by running away completely or simply traveling to see wives and other beloved family members.</p> <p>In an otherwise excellent study, the author does have the occasional dismissive statement. In one particular instance, he states that “no serious scholar could claim that . . . enslaved people ever believed themselves to be animals” (pp. 15–16). This overlooks the complex experiences of enslaved children, especially in the early years of infant psychological development. There are many sources attesting to how slaveholders treated enslaved children as animals, such as tying up infants by their legs and leaving them in cages during long working days. Slaveholding women, in particular, had a tendency to “foster” enslaved children away from a parent’s guidance. While this field of research is still underdeveloped, Blakley’s statement undermines the arguments of academics researching enslaved children’s psychosomatic growth in <strong>[End Page 601]</strong> the context of human-animal studies. 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Pasierowska </li> </ul> <em>Empire of Brutality: Enslaved People and Animals in the British Atlantic World</em>. By Christopher Michael Blakley. (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2023. Pp. xiii, 236. $45.00, ISBN 978-0-8071-7886-7.) <p><em>Empire of Brutality: Enslaved People and Animals in the British Atlantic World</em> marks a refreshing watershed in the historiography of slavery. <strong>[End Page 600]</strong> Christopher Michael Blakley has penned the first full-length book that centers enslaved persons and slaveholders in the world of fauna and the transatlantic slave trade. Historians of both slavery and animals will find a rich study that covers differing geographical scales across West Africa and throughout the British Atlantic world in the 1700s. Blakley’s overarching argument focuses on the various ways white slaveholders intentionally attempted to strip enslaved Black persons of their humanity. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 残暴帝国:Christopher Michael Blakley 著 Rachael L. Pasierowska Empire of Brutality:英国大西洋世界中被奴役的人和动物。作者:克里斯托弗-迈克尔-布莱克利。(巴吞鲁日:路易斯安那州立大学出版社,2023 年。第 xiii 页,第 236 页。45.00美元,ISBN 978-0-8071-7886-7)。残暴帝国:帝国的残暴:英国大西洋世界中被奴役的人和动物》是奴隶制史学中令人耳目一新的分水岭。[克里斯托弗-迈克尔-布莱克利撰写了第一本以动物世界和跨大西洋奴隶贸易中的被奴役者和奴隶主为中心的长篇著作。研究奴隶制和动物的历史学家会发现,这是一部内容丰富的研究著作,涵盖了 17 世纪西非和整个英国大西洋世界的不同地理范围。布莱克利的主要论点集中在白人奴隶主以各种方式有意剥夺被奴役黑人的人性。作者进一步指出,这种企图往往是徒劳的,因为被奴役者拒绝接受这种待遇,相反,"他们敢于想象一个承认并充分考虑黑人人性的世界"(第 150 页)。他的章节采用了与许多大西洋奴隶制研究类似的方法,从非洲开始,然后转向英属加勒比地区和北美,主要关注十八世纪的英国奴隶社会。广泛的档案研究从大量丰富的资料中汲取素材,包括为逃跑的被奴役者刊登的广告、日记、随笔、清单、信件、报纸、种植园手册、肖像画和皇家非洲公司的记录,以展示殖民时期的奴隶主如何持有类似的 "欧洲人将非洲裔人与牲畜等同起来的种族态度"(第 89 页)。虽然作者说这项研究的主要重点是白人对黑人的态度,但十八和十九世纪关于科学种族主义的旅行叙事已经有了大量的史料。布莱克利的研究通过分析非洲人对动物世界的了解,以及他们如何通过贸易变量来利用这些信息,对这些文献进行了补充。一个有趣的例子是撒哈拉以南非洲人和欧洲商人之间使用牛贝壳(来自小型软体动物)作为货币。这些贝壳是非洲皇家公司与非洲贸易伙伴进行交易的主要依据,说明了非洲人在西非沿岸奴隶制与动物之间的关系中的作用。在这方面,第 4 章和第 5 章是布莱克利的精华所在,详细描述了被奴役者如何通过与动物的互动来展示对奴隶制的自主性。在美洲,白人殖民者不断进行非人化的努力,导致被奴役者忽视、杀害和食用其主人的动物。还有一些被奴役者偷盗马匹,以拉近自己与强制奴役之间的距离,他们要么完全逃离,要么只是去看望妻子和其他心爱的家人。在这本出色的研究报告中,作者偶尔也会发表一些不屑一顾的言论。有一次,他说:"任何严肃的学者都不能声称......被奴役的人曾经认为自己是动物"(第 15-16 页)。这忽略了被奴役儿童的复杂经历,尤其是在婴儿心理发展的早期阶段。有许多资料可以证明奴隶主是如何把被奴役的儿童当作动物对待的,比如把婴儿的腿绑起来,在漫长的工作日把他们关在笼子里。特别是女奴隶主,她们倾向于 "寄养 "被奴役的儿童,使其脱离父母的监护。虽然这一研究领域尚不发达,但布莱克利的说法削弱了在人与动物研究[第 601 页完]背景下研究被奴役儿童心理成长的学者们的论点。通过研究被奴役儿童的学术成果,布莱克利本可以更好地探讨被奴役儿童的父母及其更广泛的社区在向这些幼小心灵灌输违背白人奴隶主动物性理论的身份认同方面所起的作用。最后,《残暴帝国》将对人类与动物的研究产生重大影响,并为研究跨大西洋世界中被奴役者及其与动物的丰富关系的学者们在这一激动人心的领域铺平了道路。Rachael L. Pasierowska 林肯大学 Copyright © 2024 The Southern Historical Association ...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Empire of Brutality: Enslaved People and Animals in the British Atlantic World by Christopher Michael Blakley (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Empire of Brutality: Enslaved People and Animals in the British Atlantic World by Christopher Michael Blakley
  • Rachael L. Pasierowska
Empire of Brutality: Enslaved People and Animals in the British Atlantic World. By Christopher Michael Blakley. (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2023. Pp. xiii, 236. $45.00, ISBN 978-0-8071-7886-7.)

Empire of Brutality: Enslaved People and Animals in the British Atlantic World marks a refreshing watershed in the historiography of slavery. [End Page 600] Christopher Michael Blakley has penned the first full-length book that centers enslaved persons and slaveholders in the world of fauna and the transatlantic slave trade. Historians of both slavery and animals will find a rich study that covers differing geographical scales across West Africa and throughout the British Atlantic world in the 1700s. Blakley’s overarching argument focuses on the various ways white slaveholders intentionally attempted to strip enslaved Black persons of their humanity. The author further contends that such attempts were often futile because enslaved persons refused such treatment and that, instead, “they dared to imagine a world that recognized and reckoned with Black humanity in its fullness” (p. 150).

His chapters follow an approach similar to many Atlantic slavery studies, beginning in Africa and then moving to the British Caribbean and North America, with their primary focus on the eighteenth-century British slave societies. The extensive archival research draws from an extensive wealth of sources, including advertisements for runaway enslaved persons, diaries, essays, inventories, letters, newspapers, plantation manuals, portraits, and the Royal African Company’s records, to demonstrate how colonial slaveholders held similar “racial attitudes among Europeans who equated people of African descent and livestock” (p. 89).

While the author states that the study’s primary focus is on white attitudes toward Black people, there already exists an extensive historiography on travel narratives from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries regarding scientific racism. Where Blakley’s study enhances this literature is through an analysis of Africans’ knowledge of the animal world and how they utilized such information through the variables of trade. One interesting example is the employment of cowrie shells (from small mollusks) as currency between sub-Saharan Africans and European merchants. These shells, upon which the Royal African Company pinioned much of its transactions with African trading partners, illustrate African agency in crafting relationships between slavery and animals along the West African littoral. In this vein, chapters 4 and 5 are Blakley’s strongest, detailing how enslaved persons demonstrated autonomy against the system of slavery through interactions with fauna. In the Americas, white colonists’ continued efforts at dehumanization led to instances of enslaved persons neglecting, killing, and consuming their owners’ animals. Other enslaved people purloined horses to put a greater distance between themselves and enforced bondage, either by running away completely or simply traveling to see wives and other beloved family members.

In an otherwise excellent study, the author does have the occasional dismissive statement. In one particular instance, he states that “no serious scholar could claim that . . . enslaved people ever believed themselves to be animals” (pp. 15–16). This overlooks the complex experiences of enslaved children, especially in the early years of infant psychological development. There are many sources attesting to how slaveholders treated enslaved children as animals, such as tying up infants by their legs and leaving them in cages during long working days. Slaveholding women, in particular, had a tendency to “foster” enslaved children away from a parent’s guidance. While this field of research is still underdeveloped, Blakley’s statement undermines the arguments of academics researching enslaved children’s psychosomatic growth in [End Page 601] the context of human-animal studies. By looking into scholarship on enslaved children, Blakley would have been better positioned to explore the role of enslaved parents and their wider community in instilling an identity that defied white slaveholders’ theories of animalistic nature in such young minds.

In closing, Empire of Brutality will have a strong influence on human-animal studies and paves the way in this exciting field for scholars of enslaved persons and their rich relations with fauna in the transatlantic world.

Rachael L. Pasierowska Lincoln University Copyright © 2024 The Southern Historical Association ...

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