玛丽·威廉森的信,或者,在大西洋奴隶制档案中看到的妇女和姐妹

Q2 Arts and Humanities
D. Paton
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引用次数: 2

摘要

“几年前,我还是你在休顿塔庄园的奴隶,托马斯·詹姆斯先生把我卖给了图明先生,因为我是个布朗女人,他对我很感兴趣。玛丽·威廉姆森(Mary Williamson)的这封信是这样开头的。几十年来,这封信一直被放在苏格兰的一个阁楼上,无人过问,直到一位历史系学生对她的家族文件产生了兴趣,并把它拿给戴安娜·帕顿(Diana Paton)看。在这篇文章中,帕顿用这封信来反思牙买加和其他大西洋奴隶社会中玛丽·威廉姆森等“布朗”女性的历史和史学。玛丽·威廉姆森(Mary Williamson)的信提供了一个罕见的视角,展示了在大西洋奴隶社会中普遍存在的白人男性和棕色皮肤女性之间的性接触。然而,它的主要焦点是在奴隶制日益“严重”的背景下,地方和家庭关系——特别是姐妹之间的关系——的更大重要性。玛丽·威廉姆森的信是一个单一的,到目前为止还没有正式存档的痕迹,在一个更广泛的大西洋奴隶制档案中,主要是奴隶主和政府官员留下的材料。帕顿问,这样一份文件对于产生关于那些出生为奴隶的人的生活和经历的知识的可能性和局限性是什么。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
MARY WILLIAMSON'S LETTER, OR, SEEING WOMEN AND SISTERS IN THE ARCHIVES OF ATLANTIC SLAVERY
ABSTRACT ‘I was a few years back a slave on your property of Houton Tower, and as a Brown woman was fancied by a Mr Tumming unto who Mr Thomas James sold me.’ Thus begins Mary Williamson's letter, which for decades sat unexamined in an attic in Scotland until a history student became interested in her family's papers, and showed it to Diana Paton. In this article, Paton uses the letter to reflect on the history and historiography of ‘Brown’ women like Mary Williamson in Jamaica and other Atlantic slave societies. Mary Williamson's letter offers a rare perspective on the sexual encounters between white men and brown women that were pervasive in Atlantic slave societies. Yet its primary focus is on the greater importance of ties of place and family – particularly of relations between sisters – in a context in which the ‘severity’ of slavery was increasing. Mary Williamson's letter is a single and thus-far not formally archived trace in a broader archive of Atlantic slavery dominated by material left by slaveholders and government officials. Paton asks what the possibilities and limits of such a document may be for generating knowledge about the lives and experiences of those who were born into slavery.
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来源期刊
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: The Royal Historical Society has published the highest quality scholarship in history for over 150 years. A subscription includes a substantial annual volume of the Society’s Transactions, which presents wide-ranging reports from the front lines of historical research by both senior and younger scholars, and two volumes from the Camden Fifth Series, which makes available to a wider audience valuable primary sources that have hitherto been available only in manuscript form.
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