Fictions of Consent: Slavery, Servitude, and Free Service in Early Modern England by Urvashi Chakravarty (review)

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 N/A MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES COMITATUS-A JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE STUDIES Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1353/cjm.2023.a912684
Sarah Bischoff
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This belief made slavery in England (supposedly) an impossibility, despite the immense amount of historical and literary material that attests to compulsory labor and service on the island during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Chakravarty examines this fissure, showing that the philosophical, legal difference between bound service and slavery is, per the title, supposed consent. Chakravarty thus argues that the primary operative fiction is that all persons on English soil willingly serve their betters all the way up to the monarch, who in turn willingly serves god. Such a structure legitimized the paradigm of the supposed impossibility of slavery on English soil—which legally and philosophically rendered enslaved people invisible—but still managed to enforce servitude through many avenues. One example she cites is the often brutal vagrancy and begging laws of the sixteenth century that punished and put to work the “masterless,” or those living outside socially acceptable systems of labor (often the houseless and/or beggars) (4). This coercion, however, is coincidental to the fiction and the mythos of English freedom, even as it is the fundamental contradiction that makes up the very matter of willing servitude. The ideological dependence upon this hairsplitting is that the idea of consent honed the fictions that underwrote and authorized compulsory servitude, even as it made slavery ostensibly impossible. This consent is a fiction in multiple senses of the word, Chakravarty argues: it is, as mentioned, an imagined reality that makes up the legal structures that forbid slavery on English soil, despite there being documented presences and an evident economic reliance on enslaved people; it is a rhetoric that turns compulsory labor into willing devotion and service; it becomes integral to the emergences of what will define the family, genealogy, and race. Of particular importance, also, is that these fictions reshape social reality as time continues, even as their artificiality stands out. These fictions can (and do) defend both the naturalization of racialized slavery and the naturalization of somatically marked race itself. These traced emergences make Chakravarty’s text a useful one for following questions of service and slavery across multiple centuries, from England to early America. These fictions will underwrite centuries of transatlantic exchange, eventually even progressing to ideologically defend the slavery that “consent” closed off. By grouping the book into three major theoretical sections—that of the servus (the slave/servant), the famulus (a servant of the household), and the libertus (the freed)—Chakravarty traces the fictions of consent through pedagogical, familial, and legal contracts that tie people to their employment (and their paternalistic mentors). Consent is not merely a mode of service; it’s an affective mode, allowing both work performance and work attitude to be policed. This multiplicity of definitional meanings is why Chakravarty describes these fictions of consent as “polyvalent and palimpsestic” (7), writing and rewriting new meanings across materials. This fact gives Chakravarty the space and ability to write about many different objects from the perspective of consent and labor—from clothes to poetry to legal contract. The first section—servus—consists of chapters 1 and 2, and are perhaps the most fascinating and complicated of the book. The first examines livery as a multifaceted symbol of both a nostalgia for feudal England as well as a [End Page 216] foreshadowing of somatic race-making, in which legible marks on the body become racializing shorthand. 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Abstract

Reviewed by: Fictions of Consent: Slavery, Servitude, and Free Service in Early Modern England by Urvashi Chakravarty Sarah Bischoff Urvashi Chakravarty, Fictions of Consent: Slavery, Servitude, and Free Service in Early Modern England (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2022), ix + 295 pp. Fictions of Consent examines the contradiction between early modern England’s reliance on compulsory service and the claims that English air was “too pure for slaves to breath [sic] in” (John Lilburne’s Star Chamber Case of 1638, cited in Chakravarty, Fictions of Consent, 1). Urvashi Chakravarty highlights that this is [End Page 215] a matter of belief—not just of legislation. This belief made slavery in England (supposedly) an impossibility, despite the immense amount of historical and literary material that attests to compulsory labor and service on the island during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Chakravarty examines this fissure, showing that the philosophical, legal difference between bound service and slavery is, per the title, supposed consent. Chakravarty thus argues that the primary operative fiction is that all persons on English soil willingly serve their betters all the way up to the monarch, who in turn willingly serves god. Such a structure legitimized the paradigm of the supposed impossibility of slavery on English soil—which legally and philosophically rendered enslaved people invisible—but still managed to enforce servitude through many avenues. One example she cites is the often brutal vagrancy and begging laws of the sixteenth century that punished and put to work the “masterless,” or those living outside socially acceptable systems of labor (often the houseless and/or beggars) (4). This coercion, however, is coincidental to the fiction and the mythos of English freedom, even as it is the fundamental contradiction that makes up the very matter of willing servitude. The ideological dependence upon this hairsplitting is that the idea of consent honed the fictions that underwrote and authorized compulsory servitude, even as it made slavery ostensibly impossible. This consent is a fiction in multiple senses of the word, Chakravarty argues: it is, as mentioned, an imagined reality that makes up the legal structures that forbid slavery on English soil, despite there being documented presences and an evident economic reliance on enslaved people; it is a rhetoric that turns compulsory labor into willing devotion and service; it becomes integral to the emergences of what will define the family, genealogy, and race. Of particular importance, also, is that these fictions reshape social reality as time continues, even as their artificiality stands out. These fictions can (and do) defend both the naturalization of racialized slavery and the naturalization of somatically marked race itself. These traced emergences make Chakravarty’s text a useful one for following questions of service and slavery across multiple centuries, from England to early America. These fictions will underwrite centuries of transatlantic exchange, eventually even progressing to ideologically defend the slavery that “consent” closed off. By grouping the book into three major theoretical sections—that of the servus (the slave/servant), the famulus (a servant of the household), and the libertus (the freed)—Chakravarty traces the fictions of consent through pedagogical, familial, and legal contracts that tie people to their employment (and their paternalistic mentors). Consent is not merely a mode of service; it’s an affective mode, allowing both work performance and work attitude to be policed. This multiplicity of definitional meanings is why Chakravarty describes these fictions of consent as “polyvalent and palimpsestic” (7), writing and rewriting new meanings across materials. This fact gives Chakravarty the space and ability to write about many different objects from the perspective of consent and labor—from clothes to poetry to legal contract. The first section—servus—consists of chapters 1 and 2, and are perhaps the most fascinating and complicated of the book. The first examines livery as a multifaceted symbol of both a nostalgia for feudal England as well as a [End Page 216] foreshadowing of somatic race-making, in which legible marks on the body become racializing shorthand. Though livery could enable its wearer—by showing an affiliation to a respectable house and legitimizing movement through restricted spaces—it also operated as a stigmatizing, bodily mark of servility, even if it is one that could...
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《同意的虚构:近代早期英国的奴隶制、奴役和免费服务》作者:乌尔瓦什·查克拉瓦蒂
《同意的虚构:近代早期英国的奴隶制、奴役和免费服务》萨拉·比肖夫Urvashi Chakravarty著,《同意的虚构:近代早期英国的奴隶制、奴役和免费服务》(费城:宾夕法尼亚大学出版社,2022),9 + 295页。《同意的小说》研究了早期现代英国对义务兵役的依赖与英国空气“太纯净,奴隶无法呼吸”的说法之间的矛盾(约翰·李尔本1638年的《星室案》,引自查克拉瓦蒂的《同意的小说》,第1期)。Urvashi Chakravarty强调,这是一个信仰问题,而不仅仅是立法问题。尽管有大量的历史和文学材料证明在16世纪和17世纪期间岛上存在强制劳动和服务,但这种信念使得奴隶制在英格兰(据说)是不可能的。查克拉瓦蒂研究了这一分歧,表明束缚服务和奴隶制在哲学上和法律上的区别,根据书名,是假定的同意。因此,查克拉瓦蒂认为,主要的操作小说是,英国土地上的所有人都愿意为他们的上级服务,一直到君主,而君主又愿意为上帝服务。这种结构使英国土地上不可能存在奴隶制的假设范式合法化——从法律上和哲学上讲,奴隶制使被奴役的人隐形——但仍然设法通过许多途径强制实行奴役。她举的一个例子是16世纪残酷的流浪和乞讨法,这些法律惩罚“无主者”,或那些生活在社会可接受的劳动体系之外的人(通常是无家可归者和/或乞丐),并让他们去工作(4)。然而,这种强制与英国自由的小说和神话是巧合的,即使它是构成自愿奴役的根本矛盾。意识形态依赖于这种细微的分歧,即同意的概念磨练了那些支持和授权强制奴役的小说,即使它使奴隶制表面上不可能。查克拉瓦蒂认为,这种同意是一种多种意义上的虚构:如前所述,它是一种想象的现实,构成了禁止在英国土地上实行奴隶制的法律结构,尽管有记录在案,而且经济上明显依赖于被奴役的人;这是一种把强制劳动变成自愿奉献和服务的修辞;它成为定义家庭、家谱和种族的出现中不可或缺的一部分。特别重要的是,随着时间的推移,这些小说重塑了社会现实,即使它们的人为性很突出。这些小说可以(也确实)既为种族化的奴隶制的归化辩护,也为带有肉体标记的种族本身的归化辩护。这些可追溯的事件使查克拉瓦蒂的文本成为追踪从英国到早期美洲几个世纪以来的服务和奴隶制问题的有用文本。这些小说将为几个世纪以来的跨大西洋交流提供担保,最终甚至发展到在意识形态上捍卫“同意”所封闭的奴隶制。查克拉瓦蒂将这本书分为三个主要的理论部分——servus(奴隶/仆人)、famulus(家庭的仆人)和libertus(被释放的人)——通过教育、家庭和法律合同将人们与他们的就业(以及他们家长式的导师)联系在一起,追溯了同意的虚构。同意不仅仅是一种服务方式;这是一种情感模式,可以监督工作表现和工作态度。这种定义意义的多样性就是为什么Chakravarty将这些关于同意的虚构描述为“多价的和改写的”(7),在材料之间书写和重写新的意义。这一事实赋予了查克拉瓦蒂空间和能力,使他能够从同意和劳动的角度来书写许多不同的对象——从服装到诗歌再到法律合同。第一部分——servus——由第一章和第二章组成,可能是本书中最迷人、最复杂的部分。第一篇研究了制服作为一个多方面的象征,既是对封建英格兰的怀旧,也是身体种族形成的预兆,在这种情况下,身体上可辨认的标记成为了种族化的速记。尽管制服可以让穿着它的人——通过显示与一个受人尊敬的家族的关系,并使在有限空间内的活动合法化——它也可以作为一种耻辱,一种奴性的身体标志,即使它可以……
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期刊介绍: Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies publishes articles by graduate students and recent PhDs in any field of medieval and Renaissance studies. The journal maintains a tradition of gathering work from across disciplines, with a special interest in articles that have an interdisciplinary or cross-cultural scope.
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