Endangered Plantations: Environmental Change and Slavery in the British Caribbean, 1631–1807

Katherine D. Johnston
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

abstract:Intent on preserving their plantations, eighteenth-century British slaveholders created a rhetoric that naturalized African labor in the Caribbean. Examining this history demonstrates the ways in which slavery and the environment are deeply entwined. In the late eighteenth century, West Indian planters began to fear for the long-term future of their plantations on two fronts. First, planters suspected that their enthusiasm for clear-cutting in attempts to maximize cropland had reduced precipitation and made the climate drier. While medical theories held that less rainfall was beneficial to human health, crops began to suffer from drought conditions. Second, parliamentary hearings on the abolition of the Atlantic slave trade threatened the labor supply on plantations. Seeking to preserve the trade, planters argued that only Africans could perform difficult labor, including clearing wooded land, in the West Indies. A close examination of planters' writings demonstrates that their arguments for African labor were in fact early articulations of environmental racism, as they deliberately placed black bodies in environmentally hazardous situations. Considering climatic change and abolition debates together shows how race is essential to the environmental history of the West Indies.
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濒临灭绝的种植园:1631-1807年英属加勒比地区的环境变化和奴隶制
为了保护他们的种植园,18世纪的英国奴隶主创造了一种修辞,使加勒比地区的非洲劳工归化。考察这段历史可以发现奴隶制和环境是如何紧密地交织在一起的。在18世纪后期,西印度群岛的种植园主开始担心他们种植园的长远未来,这有两个方面。首先,种植园主怀疑,他们为了扩大耕地面积而进行的滥伐活动减少了降水量,使气候变得更加干燥。虽然医学理论认为降雨减少对人类健康有益,但作物开始遭受干旱的影响。其次,国会关于废除大西洋奴隶贸易的听证会威胁到了种植园的劳动力供应。为了保护这种贸易,种植园主认为只有非洲人才能在西印度群岛从事艰苦的劳动,包括砍伐林地。对种植园主作品的仔细研究表明,他们对非洲劳工的论点实际上是环境种族主义的早期表达,因为他们故意将黑人身体置于环境危险的境地。把气候变化和废奴辩论放在一起考虑,表明种族对西印度群岛的环境历史是多么重要。
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CiteScore
0.30
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发文量
18
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