Fugitive Care: Harriet Jacobs and the Politics of Domestic Science

IF 0.1 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN J19-The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.1353/jnc.2022.0015
Jess Libow
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Abstract

Abstract:In this essay, I examine Harriet Jacobs's intervention in antebellum debates about African American's capacity to "take care of themselves" by recovering her expertise in domestic health science–what Jacobs called "the science of good management" – in and beyond Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (1861). I argue that throughout her narrative as well as in her private and public correspondence, Jacobs transforms caregiving into a strain of what Britt Rusert terms "fugitive science." Jacobs, who performed care labor while enslaved, also worked as a nurse for the Willis family while writing Incidents and then provided aid to formerly enslaved refugees in Civil War "contraband camps." Across her writings, she suggests that if African American women were expected to bolster the health of white charges, then that expertise could be harnessed in service of Black well-being. While historians have documented how enslaved women were often treated as instruments rather than agents of medical knowledge, attending to caregiving highlights an alternative, fugitive legacy of enslaved women and health science in the United States.
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逃亡的关怀:哈丽特·雅各布斯和家庭科学的政治
摘要:在这篇文章中,我研究了哈丽特·雅各布斯在内战前关于非裔美国人“照顾自己”能力的辩论中的干预,通过恢复她在家庭健康科学方面的专业知识——雅各布斯称之为“良好管理的科学”——在《一个奴隶女孩的生活事件》(1861)内外。我认为,在她的整个叙述以及她的私人和公共通信中,雅各布斯将护理转变为一种布里特·鲁塞特(Britt Rusert)所说的“逃亡的科学”。雅各布斯在被奴役期间从事护理工作,在撰写《事件》的同时,他还担任威利斯家庭的护士,然后为内战“违禁品营地”中曾经被奴役的难民提供援助。在她的著作中,她提出,如果非裔美国女性被期望为白人的健康提供帮助,那么她们的专业知识就可以被用来为黑人的福祉服务。虽然历史学家已经记录了被奴役的妇女如何经常被视为工具而不是医学知识的代理人,但在美国,参与护理突出了被奴役妇女和健康科学的另一种逃亡遗产。
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CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
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