《中国女士:早期美国的阿方梅》

Alice Zhang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在美国历史的大部分时期,拥有纺织品所蕴含的经济影响和法律权利并没有延续到内战后的时代,导致像林肯夫人这样的妇女“背上只有衣服”(289)。爱德华兹将纺织品的力量和拥有纺织品的人所享有的合法权利置于背景下,为内战后的几年里妇女、穷人和其他边缘化人群所经历的权利丧失提出了论据。她认为,“与纺织品有关的法律原则和惯例……以新共和国的经济和统治秩序为中心”(297)。然而,在最近的学术研究中,“在革命和内战之前的几十年里,所有处于边缘地位的人所使用的法律原则和实践都被忽视了”(298)。因此,这就是她为自己设定的任务:展示“对纺织品的关注揭示了一段更复杂的历史,在这段历史中,所有对权利有微弱要求的人都参与了经济、法律和治理”(298)。的确,这是爱德华兹论证的关键,她通过讲述无数的故事来支持这一点。尽管关于时装和纺织品在历史上所扮演的角色已经出版了许多书籍,我在我的开篇段落中只列出了其中的几本,但据我所知,没有一本书承担了调查美国内战前与服装和其他纺织品相关的产权这一艰巨任务。在努力阐明这一主题的过程中,爱德华兹为读者提供了精心研究、精心编辑和创造性地呈现的交换价值和产权的历史分析,因为它们是通过纺织品所有权获得的。文本中的插图支持了所提出的论点,并要求读者进入被描绘的时间和地点,并且在大量注释中列出的档案材料(确切地说是83页)呼吁读者采取下一步行动,为这个迷人的研究领域做出贡献。最后,用作者自己的话来说,“个人和专业的结合”(259)使爱德华兹的书不仅是一次教育经历,而且是一次令人满意的阅读。正如爱德华兹所指出的,“纺织品市场促进了……交换是由真实的人组成的”(173),通过她的工作,我们开始了解这些真实的人,以及他们在借、偷、当、交易和囤积纺织品时的法律互动——民事和刑事——的重要性。
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The Chinese Lady: Afong Moy in Early America
that the economic influence and legal rights embedded in the possession of textiles for most of American history did not carry over into the post-Civil War era, leaving women like Mrs. Lincoln “with only the clothes on their backs” (289). Contextualizing the power of textiles and the legal rights afforded those who owned them, Edwards creates an argument for the loss of rights experienced by women, the poor, and other marginalized people in the years following the Civil War. She contends, “The legal principles and practices associated with textiles ... featured centrally in the new republic’s economic and governing order” (297). However, “the legal principles and practices that all people on the margins used in [the] decades before the Revolution and the Civil War have been overlooked” in recent scholarship (298). This, then, is the task she sets for herself: to show that a “focus on textiles reveals a more complicated history, [one] in which all people with tenuous claims to rights involved themselves in the economy, law, and governance” (298). Indeed, that is the crux of Edwards’s argument, which she supports through the myriad stories she tells. Although numerous books have been published on the roles fashion and textiles have played in history, and I list only a few of those in my opening paragraph, none that I am aware of has taken on the herculean task of investigating the property rights tied to articles of clothing and other textiles in the antebellum United States. In her efforts to illuminate the subject, Edwards provides readers with a meticulously researched, carefully edited, and creatively presented historical analysis of exchange value and property rights as they were acquired through textile ownership. The illustrations included in the text support the arguments being made and ask readers to step into the times and places being depicted, and the archival materials listed in the voluminous notes (eightythree pages to be exact) call on readers to take the next steps in contributing to this fascinating field of research. In the end, “[t]he mix of the personal and [the] professional” (259), to use the author’s own words, makes Edwards’s book not only an educational experience but also a satisfying read. As Edwards notes, “The part of the textile market that facilitated ... exchanges was composed of real people” (173), and through her work, we come to know these real people and the significance of their legal interactions—civil and criminal—as they borrow, steal, pawn, trade, and hoard textiles.
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