《女性的灵魂:下南方被奴役妇女的宗教文化》作者:亚历克西斯·威尔斯-奥格戈梅

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.1353/jer.2023.a897992
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Their triple consciousness should be recognized as the source of enslaved religious and ethical culture, with the \"psyches of enslaved men and children\" flowing from the bedrock of women's triple consciousness. In The Souls of Womenfolk, Wells-Oghoghomeh introduces several powerful interlocking concepts that help to narrate both the history of slavery and the history of religion in new, distinctive, and important ways. One foundational concept is the \"culture of dismemberment,\" which serves as shorthand for the collective experiences of dislocation, familial separation, rape, and other forms of physical violence that formed the core of the transatlantic system of slavery. The culture of dismemberment also encompassed the system of capitalism that reduced people to profit, and fundamentally shaped the ways in which bodies were viewed and treated. For enslaved women, the culture of dismemberment had distinctive features, most notably the \"resignification of the womb.\" Enslaved women recognized that their wombs were commodified in a transatlantic economic system that relied on their powers of reproduction. This resignifying process in the service of human capital forced women to wrestle with different existential questions than enslaved men, and their experiences formed the core of enslaved religious cultures. They asked existential and moral questions about how to respond to injustice and violation, how to protect themselves and their families, and how to build a life together and in community with others to mitigate the culture of dismemberment. Bondpeople's answer to dismemberment was \"re/membrance,\" a creative and adaptable orientation that drew on West African precedents and responded to the challenges of the Americas (2). Re/membrance came in many forms, and each chapter in The Souls of Womenfolk elucidates varieties of re/membering practices, orientations, and beliefs. As mothers, enslaved women recognized that their wombs had become the producers of human capital, and this knowledge shaped the ways that they understood the cosmos, defined ethical priorities, and engaged existential questions. They also shaped child-rearing, as Black women aimed to protect themselves and their children from the violating effects of slavery and the culture of dismemberment. The orientation toward \"re/membrance,\" and the values that flowed from it, are part of what Wells-Oghoghomeh calls \"womb ethics,\" another [End Page 335] key theoretical formulation (71). Womb ethics encompassed enslaved women's definitions of what was good, just, right, and necessary, and they were flexible and adaptable. Womb ethics had no universalizing notions of what was correct or moral; they were oriented toward re/membrance, mitigation of violence and trauma, and improving the quality of life for oneself and one's kin. Womb ethics could encompass filicide as well as marronage or parental surrogacy. Crucially, the category of \"re/membrance\" helps to orient the narration of sexual violence and rape, a topic that Wells-Oghoghomeh attends to most directly in Chapter 3. Here, Wells-Oghoghomeh describes the distinctive and devastating culture of sexual dismemberment that enslaved women were born into, and into which they bore children. Justified by logics that impugned the morality of Black women, Wells-Oghoghomeh shows how the idea of \"sense,\" or \"common sense,\" offered enslaved women a \"mode of perception\" that was \"pragmatic and adaptable\" (96). Sense could include dissembling, disremembering, and strategic silences that helped to preserve psychosocial survival in a dismembering culture. Wells-Oghoghomeh also shows how sexual choice became a sacred value, as did privacy and pleasure. Perhaps more than any other topic, the framework of re/membrance and womb ethics offers a way to write about the culture...","PeriodicalId":45213,"journal":{"name":"JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Souls of Womenfolk: The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South by Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh (review)\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/jer.2023.a897992\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Reviewed by: The Souls of Womenfolk: The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South by Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh Katharine Gerbner (bio) Keywords Slavery, Religion, Culture of dismemberment, Re/membrance, Protestantism, Christianity The Souls of Womenfolk: The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South. By Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh. 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One foundational concept is the \\\"culture of dismemberment,\\\" which serves as shorthand for the collective experiences of dislocation, familial separation, rape, and other forms of physical violence that formed the core of the transatlantic system of slavery. The culture of dismemberment also encompassed the system of capitalism that reduced people to profit, and fundamentally shaped the ways in which bodies were viewed and treated. For enslaved women, the culture of dismemberment had distinctive features, most notably the \\\"resignification of the womb.\\\" Enslaved women recognized that their wombs were commodified in a transatlantic economic system that relied on their powers of reproduction. This resignifying process in the service of human capital forced women to wrestle with different existential questions than enslaved men, and their experiences formed the core of enslaved religious cultures. 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The orientation toward \\\"re/membrance,\\\" and the values that flowed from it, are part of what Wells-Oghoghomeh calls \\\"womb ethics,\\\" another [End Page 335] key theoretical formulation (71). Womb ethics encompassed enslaved women's definitions of what was good, just, right, and necessary, and they were flexible and adaptable. Womb ethics had no universalizing notions of what was correct or moral; they were oriented toward re/membrance, mitigation of violence and trauma, and improving the quality of life for oneself and one's kin. Womb ethics could encompass filicide as well as marronage or parental surrogacy. Crucially, the category of \\\"re/membrance\\\" helps to orient the narration of sexual violence and rape, a topic that Wells-Oghoghomeh attends to most directly in Chapter 3. Here, Wells-Oghoghomeh describes the distinctive and devastating culture of sexual dismemberment that enslaved women were born into, and into which they bore children. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

关键词:奴隶制,宗教,肢解文化,重/纪念,新教,基督教《妇女的灵魂:南方南部被奴役妇女的宗教文化》作者:Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh。(教堂山:北卡罗来纳大学出版社,2021年。320页。布,95美元,纸,27.95美元)。亚历克西斯·威尔斯-奥格戈梅在她开创性的新书《女性的灵魂》中写道,内战前南方被奴役的女性有一种“三重意识”。Wells-Oghoghomeh展示了奴隶女性作为被奴役的黑人女性的(再)生产需求的交叉经历如何导致“本体论的分支和道德困境”(2)。她们的三重意识应该被认为是被奴役的宗教和伦理文化的来源,“被奴役的男人和孩子的心理”从女性三重意识的基石流出。在《女性的灵魂》一书中,威尔斯-奥格戈梅引入了几个强有力的相互关联的概念,这些概念有助于以新颖、独特和重要的方式叙述奴隶制和宗教史。其中一个基本概念是“肢解文化”,它是对流离失所、家庭分离、强奸和其他形式的身体暴力等集体经历的概括,这些经历构成了跨大西洋奴隶制体系的核心。肢解文化也包含了资本主义制度,这种制度把人变成了利润,并从根本上塑造了人们看待和对待尸体的方式。对于被奴役的妇女来说,肢解文化有着鲜明的特征,最明显的是“子宫的辞职”。被奴役的妇女认识到,她们的子宫在一个依赖于她们生殖能力的跨大西洋经济体系中被商品化了。这种为人力资本服务的辞职过程迫使女性与被奴役的男性相比,努力解决不同的存在问题,她们的经历形成了被奴役的宗教文化的核心。他们提出了存在主义和道德问题,包括如何应对不公正和侵犯,如何保护自己和家人,以及如何与他人建立共同生活和社区,以减轻肢解文化。邦联人民对肢解的回答是“重新加入”,这是一种创造性和适应性强的取向,借鉴了西非的先例,并对美洲的挑战做出了回应(2)。重新加入有多种形式,《妇女的灵魂》的每一章都阐明了各种各样的重新加入实践、取向和信仰。作为母亲,被奴役的妇女认识到她们的子宫已经成为人力资本的生产者,这种知识塑造了她们理解宇宙、定义道德优先事项和处理存在问题的方式。他们也影响了养育孩子的方式,因为黑人妇女的目标是保护自己和孩子免受奴隶制和肢解文化的侵害。对“重生/记忆”的取向,以及由此产生的价值观,是wells - oghoghoomeh所说的“子宫伦理”的一部分,这是另一个关键的理论构想(71页)。子宫伦理包含了被奴役的女性对什么是好、正义、正确和必要的定义,它们是灵活和可适应的。子宫伦理学没有关于什么是正确或道德的普遍概念;他们的目标是缅怀,减轻暴力和创伤,改善自己和亲人的生活质量。子宫伦理可能包括弑子、结婚或代孕。至关重要的是,“回忆/记忆”的范畴有助于定位性暴力和强奸的叙述,这是威尔斯-奥格戈梅在第三章中最直接关注的话题。在这里,威尔斯-奥格戈梅描述了一种独特而毁灭性的性肢解文化,奴隶妇女出生在这种文化中,她们在这种文化中生下了孩子。威尔斯-奥格戈梅以质疑黑人女性道德的逻辑为依据,展示了“理智”或“常识”的概念如何为被奴役的女性提供了一种“实用且适应性强”的“感知模式”(96)。理智可以包括掩饰、遗忘和战略性沉默,这些都有助于在肢解的文化中保持社会心理生存。wells - oghoghohomeh也展示了性选择如何成为一种神圣的价值,就像隐私和快乐一样。也许比其他任何话题都更重要的是,重/记忆和子宫伦理的框架提供了一种描述文化的方式……
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The Souls of Womenfolk: The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South by Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh (review)
Reviewed by: The Souls of Womenfolk: The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South by Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh Katharine Gerbner (bio) Keywords Slavery, Religion, Culture of dismemberment, Re/membrance, Protestantism, Christianity The Souls of Womenfolk: The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South. By Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2021. Pp. 320. Cloth, $95.00, paper, $27.95). Enslaved women in the antebellum south inhabited a "triple consciousness," writes Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh in her groundbreaking new book, The Souls of Womenfolk. Wells-Oghoghomeh shows how bondwomen's intersectional [End Page 334] experiences as enslaved Black women with (re)productive demands led to "ontological ramifications and moral dilemmas" (2). Their triple consciousness should be recognized as the source of enslaved religious and ethical culture, with the "psyches of enslaved men and children" flowing from the bedrock of women's triple consciousness. In The Souls of Womenfolk, Wells-Oghoghomeh introduces several powerful interlocking concepts that help to narrate both the history of slavery and the history of religion in new, distinctive, and important ways. One foundational concept is the "culture of dismemberment," which serves as shorthand for the collective experiences of dislocation, familial separation, rape, and other forms of physical violence that formed the core of the transatlantic system of slavery. The culture of dismemberment also encompassed the system of capitalism that reduced people to profit, and fundamentally shaped the ways in which bodies were viewed and treated. For enslaved women, the culture of dismemberment had distinctive features, most notably the "resignification of the womb." Enslaved women recognized that their wombs were commodified in a transatlantic economic system that relied on their powers of reproduction. This resignifying process in the service of human capital forced women to wrestle with different existential questions than enslaved men, and their experiences formed the core of enslaved religious cultures. They asked existential and moral questions about how to respond to injustice and violation, how to protect themselves and their families, and how to build a life together and in community with others to mitigate the culture of dismemberment. Bondpeople's answer to dismemberment was "re/membrance," a creative and adaptable orientation that drew on West African precedents and responded to the challenges of the Americas (2). Re/membrance came in many forms, and each chapter in The Souls of Womenfolk elucidates varieties of re/membering practices, orientations, and beliefs. As mothers, enslaved women recognized that their wombs had become the producers of human capital, and this knowledge shaped the ways that they understood the cosmos, defined ethical priorities, and engaged existential questions. They also shaped child-rearing, as Black women aimed to protect themselves and their children from the violating effects of slavery and the culture of dismemberment. The orientation toward "re/membrance," and the values that flowed from it, are part of what Wells-Oghoghomeh calls "womb ethics," another [End Page 335] key theoretical formulation (71). Womb ethics encompassed enslaved women's definitions of what was good, just, right, and necessary, and they were flexible and adaptable. Womb ethics had no universalizing notions of what was correct or moral; they were oriented toward re/membrance, mitigation of violence and trauma, and improving the quality of life for oneself and one's kin. Womb ethics could encompass filicide as well as marronage or parental surrogacy. Crucially, the category of "re/membrance" helps to orient the narration of sexual violence and rape, a topic that Wells-Oghoghomeh attends to most directly in Chapter 3. Here, Wells-Oghoghomeh describes the distinctive and devastating culture of sexual dismemberment that enslaved women were born into, and into which they bore children. Justified by logics that impugned the morality of Black women, Wells-Oghoghomeh shows how the idea of "sense," or "common sense," offered enslaved women a "mode of perception" that was "pragmatic and adaptable" (96). Sense could include dissembling, disremembering, and strategic silences that helped to preserve psychosocial survival in a dismembering culture. Wells-Oghoghomeh also shows how sexual choice became a sacred value, as did privacy and pleasure. Perhaps more than any other topic, the framework of re/membrance and womb ethics offers a way to write about the culture...
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期刊介绍: The Journal of the Early Republic is a quarterly journal committed to publishing the best scholarship on the history and culture of the United States in the years of the early republic (1776–1861). JER is published for the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic. SHEAR membership includes an annual subscription to the journal.
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