草编工艺、帝国教育和人种学展览是海地和库拉索岛紧密结合的性别生产场所

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Material Culture Pub Date : 2023-11-16 DOI:10.1177/13591835231210689
Charlotte Hammond
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引用次数: 0

摘要

二十世纪初,加勒比地区生产的草编工艺品在该地区的出口中只占很小的比例,但却具有可持续性。在美国占领海地(1915-1934 年)之后,手工艺品作为经济 "发展 "而得到推广:商品化的民俗为来访游客带来欢乐。直到 1946 年,在库拉索岛,作为天主教会文明使命的一项战略,年轻女性在技术学校接受所谓的 "巴拿马帽 "编织培训(Römer,1977 年);她们的劳动产品经常在国际博览会上展出,并出口到欧洲和美国销售。本文认为,传教士教育声称要使当地手工艺技能现代化、工业化并重估其价值,以造福海地和荷属加勒比海地区的当地居民,但这种教育却延续了殖民时代的性别和种族分工,使学生为在全球纺织业的工厂工作做好准备并受到约束。我以荷兰国家世界文化博物馆收藏的稻草工艺品和照片为起点,追溯帝国教育与作为性别生产场所的人种学展览之间的纠葛。借鉴让-卡西米尔(Jean Casimir)的 "反种植"(contre-plantation)概念(2001 年),我探讨了海地特定抵抗时期的土著手工艺知识历史如何培养了人们对劳动剥削和种族资本主义的性别逻辑的认同。
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Straw craft, imperial education and ethnographic exhibitions as tightly braided sites of gender production in Haiti and Curaçao
Woven straw work produced in the Caribbean in the early twentieth century represented a small but sustainable percentage of the region's exports. Following the US occupation in Haiti (1915–1934), handicrafts were promoted as economic ‘development’: commodified folklore fashioned for the delight of visiting tourists. Up until 1946 in Curaçao, as a strategy of the Catholic church's civilising mission, young women trained to plait the so-called ‘Panama hat’ at technical schools (Römer, 1977); the products of their labour were often exhibited at international expositions and exported for sale in Europe and the United States. This article argues that missionary education that claimed to modernise, industrialise and revalue local handicraft skills to the benefit of local populations in Haiti and the Dutch Caribbean has instead perpetuated colonial gendered and racialised divisions of labour that prepare and discipline students for factory work in the global textile industries. I use straw artefacts and photographs from the collection of the Dutch National Museum of World Cultures as a starting point to trace the entanglements between imperial education and ethnographic exhibitions as sites of gender production. Drawing on Jean Casimir's concept of contre-plantation (2001), I explore how histories of indigenous craft knowledge during specific periods of resistance in Haiti have nurtured disidentification with a gendered logic of labour exploitation and racial capitalism.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: The Journal of Material Culture is an interdisciplinary journal designed to cater for the increasing interest in material culture studies. It is concerned with the relationship between artefacts and social relations irrespective of time and place and aims to systematically explore the linkage between the construction of social identities and the production and use of culture. The Journal of Material Culture transcends traditional disciplinary and cultural boundaries drawing on a wide range of disciplines including anthropology, archaeology, design studies, history, human geography, museology and ethnography.
期刊最新文献
Memory and materiality: The becoming of biographic objects after war and forced displacement. The commercial and regional imagery of big things: Establishing a foundation for the study of oversized roadside landmarks Rethinking gender from the ethnographic museum. Introduction to the special issue Straw craft, imperial education and ethnographic exhibitions as tightly braided sites of gender production in Haiti and Curaçao COVID, clay, and the digital: The role of digital media in pottery skill development during the COVID-19 pandemic in Britain
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