“黑但有人性”

C. Fracchia
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引用次数: 20

摘要

在西班牙帝国,非洲人占总人口的10- 15%,这是由于跨大西洋奴隶贸易的制度化,将70 - 80万非洲人作为奴隶带到西班牙和葡萄牙。如果我们加上在这些欧洲领土上出生的奴隶,以及三四十万摩尔人、柏柏尔人和土耳其人的奴隶,那么在这一时期,伊比利亚半岛上大约有200万奴隶。非裔西班牙人的谚语"黑人但人类"提供了本书标题的一部分,作为一个透镜,通过它来探索奴隶制的某些视觉表现方式,既体现又再现了次等群体的霸权视野,同时为非裔西班牙人奴隶和前奴隶自己的批判性和解放实践提供了材料。因此,通过探索视觉制度与早期现代西班牙和新世界关于奴隶制和人类多样性的话语之间的联系,它使我们能够对奴隶主体性的表达产生批判性的见解。我的书提供了一个复杂的新的阅读,在哈布斯堡西班牙被忽视的艺术生产的时刻,确立了他们的重要性,作为权力和抵抗的继电器。我们可以说,“黑人但人类”的主题编码了一个多层次的过程,通过这个过程,一个黑人解放的主体出现了,一个“黑人国家”形成了集体抵抗,以及一系列艺术家在视觉上表达这些时刻的方式。因此,这句谚语是全书六章的主线。
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'Black but Human'
The African presence in imperial Spain, of between 10-15 per cent of the population, was due to the institutionalization of the transatlantic slave trade that brought between seven- to eight hundred thousand Africans as slaves to Spain and Portugal. If we add those slaves born in these European territories and the three to four hundred thousand Moor, Berber and Turk slaves, there were approximately two million slaves living in the Iberian Peninsula during this period. The Afro-Hispanic proverb ‘Black but Human’ that provides part of the book’s title, serves as a lens through which to explore the ways in which certain visual representations of slavery both embody and reproduce hegemonic visions of subaltern groups, and at the same time provide material for critical and emancipatory practices by Afro-Hispanic slaves and ex-slaves themselves. It thus allows us to generate critical insights into the articulations of slave subjectivity by exploring the links between visual regimes and the early modern Spanish and New World discourses on slavery and human diversity. My book provides a complex new reading of neglected moments of artistic production in Hapsburg Spain establishing their importance as relays of power and resistance. We could claim that the ‘Black but Human’ topos encodes the multilayered processes through which a black emancipatory subject emerges and a ‘black nation’ forges a collective resistance, and the ways in which these moments are articulated visually by a range of artists. Thus, this proverb is the main thread of the six chapters of this book.
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'Black but Human' Conclusion What Is Human about Slavery? The Image of Freedom Visual Culture and Slavery
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