The Status of Enslaved Women in West Central Africa, 1800–1830

IF 0.7 4区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY AFRICAN ECONOMIC HISTORY Pub Date : 2021-05-13 DOI:10.1353/aeh.2021.0005
Mariana P. Candido, Vanessa S. Oliveira
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT:Women represented the majority of the enslaved in western Africa, where they were valued for their productive and reproductive capacities. Enslaved women performed agricultural and domestic work, retail sales, and contributed to extend kinship groups bearing children fathered by their masters. In his work on the Sokoto Caliphate, Paul E. Lovejoy emphasized the sexual dimension in the enslavement of women. Lovejoy has argued that although women provided important productive labor, free men also considered physical attraction when acquiring enslaved women. Sexual abuse was an important aspect regarding women’s experience in captivity. In dialogue with Lovejoy’s scholarship, this article examines the experiences of enslaved women in Luanda and Benguela, the two major ports of Portuguese Angola, particularly their exposure to sexual violence. Drawing upon unexplored baptism records produced between 1800 and 1830, this study stresses how slave owners abused enslaved women in Luanda and Benguela, which resulted in the birth of children. Some infants were freed by their fathers while the majority lived under slavery as did their enslaved mothers.
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1800–1830年西非被奴役妇女的地位
摘要:在西非被奴役者中,妇女占大多数,她们的生产和生殖能力受到重视。被奴役的妇女从事农业和家务劳动、零售业,并为扩大由其主人抚养子女的亲属关系做出贡献。保罗·E·洛夫乔伊在其关于索科托哈里发的著作中强调了奴役妇女的性层面。洛夫乔伊认为,尽管女性提供了重要的生产劳动,但自由男性在获得被奴役的女性时也考虑了身体吸引力。性虐待是妇女被囚禁经历的一个重要方面。在与洛夫乔伊的学术对话中,本文探讨了葡萄牙安哥拉的两个主要港口罗安达和本格拉被奴役妇女的经历,特别是她们遭受性暴力的经历。这项研究借鉴了1800年至1830年间未经探索的洗礼记录,强调了卢安达和本格拉的奴隶主如何虐待被奴役的妇女,从而导致了孩子的出生。一些婴儿被父亲释放,而大多数婴儿和被奴役的母亲一样生活在奴隶制之下。
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