Seeking Freedom in the Midst of Slavery

Damian Alan Pargas
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Slave flight in the antebellum South did not always coincide with the political geography of freedom. Indeed, spaces and places within the U.S. South attracted the largest number of fugitive slaves. From the forests that bordered plantation districts (where slaves remained hidden and maintained by local slave communities) to southern cities (where slaves attempted to pass for free blacks), a majority of fugitive slaves strove for freedom by disguising themselves within the slaveholding states rather than risk long-distance flight attempts to formally free territories such as the northern U.S., Canada, and Mexico. This chapter examines the experiences of fugitive slaves who fled to southern cities between 1800 and 1860. It touches upon themes such as the motivations for fleeing to urban areas (e.g., slave families dodging forced migration), the networks that facilitated such flight attempts, and the ways in which runaway slaves navigated sites of “informal freedom” after arrival in urban areas. Whereas some scholars have approached this group of runaways mainly as “absentees” or “truants” (temporary runaways), this chapter argues that throughout the South, many fugitive slaves who hid out in towns and cities were in fact permanent refugees from slavery—at least by intent, and often by outcome.
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在奴隶制中寻求自由
内战前南方的奴隶逃亡并不总是与自由的政治地理相一致。事实上,美国南部的空间和地方吸引了最多的逃亡奴隶。从与种植园区接壤的森林(奴隶被当地奴隶社区隐藏和维护)到南方城市(奴隶试图冒充自由黑人),大多数逃亡奴隶通过在蓄奴州伪装自己来争取自由,而不是冒险长途逃亡,试图正式解放美国北部、加拿大和墨西哥等地区。这一章考察了1800年至1860年间逃到南方城市的逃亡奴隶的经历。它涉及的主题包括逃往城市地区的动机(例如,奴隶家庭逃避被迫迁移),促进这种逃跑企图的网络,以及逃亡奴隶到达城市地区后导航“非正式自由”地点的方式。尽管一些学者认为这群逃亡者主要是“缺席者”或“逃学者”(临时逃亡者),但本章认为,在整个南方,许多躲在城镇和城市里的逃亡奴隶实际上是奴隶制的永久难民——至少是出于意图,而且往往是出于结果。
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