在家学习奴隶制

Pub Date : 2021-01-29 DOI:10.1163/2405836X-00601003
Andrea H. Livesey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自从斯蒂芬妮·坎普(Stephanie Camp)写了奴隶在奴隶劳动种植园上创造的“竞争”地理之后,建筑史领域之外的研究很少将建筑环境作为了解美国奴隶生活和奴隶心态的来源。本文以路易斯安那州(garonni)的青少年附属建筑为出发点,来理解白人父母是如何教导和强化对环境和奴役人民的统治观念,同时将年轻的白人儿子扎根于奴隶劳动种植园的“家”。本文利用建筑证据,以及奴隶主和被奴役者留下的证词,认为通过将年轻的男性奴隶主从主种植园转移到单独的建筑中,白人奴役父母在奴隶劳动种植园的性别化地理中创造了性暴力的“风险空间”。对于路易斯安那州奴隶劳动种植园的被奴役妇女来说,由于其隐私性、年龄和性别的特殊性,garonni只是一个增加风险的空间,这些风险来自于在建成环境中操纵的暴力。
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Learning Slavery at Home
Since Stephanie Camp wrote of the “rival” geography that enslaved people created on slave labor plantations, few studies outside the field of architectural history have used the built environment as a source to understand the lives of enslaved people and the mindsets of enslavers in the United States. This article takes adolescent outbuildings in Louisiana (garçonnières) as a starting point to understand how white parents taught and reinforced ideas of dominance over both the environment and enslaved people and simultaneously rooted young white sons to a slave labor plantation “home.” Using architectural evidence, alongside testimony left behind by both enslavers and the enslaved, this article argues that by moving young male enslavers out of the main plantation house and into a separate building, white enslaving parents created a “risk space” for sexual violence within the sexualized geography of the slave labor plantation. The garçonnière, with its privacy and age-and gender-specificity, constituted just one space of increased risk for enslaved women on Louisiana slave labor plantations from a violence that was manipulated within the built environment.
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