Consuming Monsters: Hungry Animals in the Discourse on Slavery

IF 0.1 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN Arizona Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-06-10 DOI:10.1353/arq.2021.0009
E. Pearson
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Abstract

Abstract:From the late-eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth century, abolitionists used depictions of hungry animals such as sharks, birds, and dogs to capture the consumptive logic of chattel slavery. In the hands of white abolitionists, these tropes offered powerful condemnations of the appetites driving the slave system, but they also risked implying that enslaved people were "natural" prey and passive victims. In response, African American abolitionists reworked hungry animal tropes to emphasize resistance and to offer a more nuanced picture of the psyche of enslavers. Building on recent scholarship on animals in the discourse on slavery, this essay reveals that the threat of consumption is a critical (and overlooked) aspect of these tropes, allowing commentators to show how the slave system fuses abstract economics and lived experience, instinctive impulses and careful strategy.
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消耗怪物:关于奴隶制话语中的饥饿动物
摘要:从18世纪末到19世纪中期,废奴主义者用对鲨鱼、鸟类和狗等饥饿动物的描绘来捕捉动产奴隶制的消费逻辑。在白人废奴主义者手中,这些比喻有力地谴责了驱动奴隶制度的欲望,但也有可能暗示被奴役的人是“自然”的猎物和被动的受害者。作为回应,非裔美国废奴主义者重新设计了饥饿动物的比喻,以强调抵抗,并对奴隶的心理进行了更细致的描述。这篇文章以最近关于奴隶制话语中动物的研究为基础,揭示了消费的威胁是这些比喻的一个关键(也是被忽视的)方面,使评论家能够展示奴隶制度是如何融合抽象经济学和生活经验、本能冲动和谨慎策略的。
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来源期刊
Arizona Quarterly
Arizona Quarterly LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Arizona Quarterly publishes scholarly essays on American literature, culture, and theory. It is our mission to subject these categories to debate, argument, interpretation, and contestation via critical readings of primary texts. We accept essays that are grounded in textual, formal, cultural, and theoretical examination of texts and situated with respect to current academic conversations whilst extending the boundaries thereof.
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