航海抄写员:20世纪印度洋的循环法

IF 0.8 3区 社会学 Q1 HISTORY Law and History Review Pub Date : 2022-08-30 DOI:10.1017/S0738248022000402
F. Bishara
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引用次数: 0

摘要

公海上的律师执业是什么样子的?这一问题在法律历史学家中一直有一些讨论,大部分证据来自欧洲船只在大西洋和亚洲的相遇。本文采取了不同的策略,以20世纪早期阿拉伯独桅帆船船长Abdulmajeed Al-Failakawi的航海日志中抄录的一系列合同为出发点。虽然其中一些似乎是纳霍达签署或见证的合同,但大多数是合同模板,为印度洋海事界成员之间的各种书面义务提供了公式。在阅读法拉卡维和其他印度洋纳霍达留下的合同时,我思考了法律是如何在一个由海员组成的流动社会中传播的,他们试图在他们的船上和水域上塑造一个商业世界的轮廓,并将其编织在帝国的海景中。我探索了法律和法律认识论的日常形式是如何在印度洋世界的海上市场上流通的,在殖民和帝国政治经济的边缘,通过演员阅读不同类型的文学,并在船长、航海家、超级货主和抄写员的多重角色之间移动。
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The Sailing Scribes: Circulating Law in the Twentieth-Century Indian Ocean
What did the practice of law look like on the high seas? This has been a matter of some discussion among legal historians, with the bulk of the evidence coming from encounters between European ships in the Atlantic and Asia. This article takes a different tack, taking as its starting point a series of contracts copied into the logbook of the early-twentieth century Arab dhow captain (nakhoda) ‘Abdulmajeed Al-Failakawi. Although some of these appear to have been contracts that the nakhoda entered into or witnessed, most were contractual templates that presented formulas for a variety of written obligations between members of the Indian Ocean maritime community. In reading these formulas alongside contracts left behind by Al-Failakawi and other Indian Ocean nakhodas, I reflect on how law circulated by members of an itinerant society of mariners that sought to forge the contours of a commercial world on their ships and across the waters, and weave it through an imperial seascape. I explore how workaday forms of law and legal epistemologies circulated around the maritime marketplaces of the Indian Ocean world, at the margins of a colonial and imperial political economy, through actors who read across different genres of literature, and who moved between the multiple roles of captain, navigator, supercargo, and scribe.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
12.50%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: Law and History Review (LHR), America"s leading legal history journal, encompasses American, European, and ancient legal history issues. The journal"s purpose is to further research in the fields of the social history of law and the history of legal ideas and institutions. LHR features articles, essays, commentaries by international authorities, and reviews of important books on legal history. American Society for Legal History
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