法律的生意:爱德华·琼斯的《已知世界》中的特殊利润

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN MELUS Pub Date : 2021-09-01 DOI:10.1093/melus/mlab041
Elizabeth Yukins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文考察了爱德华·琼斯在《已知世界》(2003)中激进的史学,特别是他如何将法律表现为美国奴隶制运作中的一种反复无常、不合逻辑和生动性的力量。琼斯着重强调了19世纪美国法律制度的荒谬之处的可行性和盈利性。这篇文章扩展了目前的学术研究,探讨了琼斯小说中的一个中心张力:他将日常与离奇联系在一起。矛盾的是,琼斯低调的现实主义充斥着怪异的现象,从双头鸡到同类相食的执法官,他将平凡与怪异并列,迫使读者认识到美国奴隶法的荒谬和强大力量。从琼斯对历史学家和当地双头鸡故事的不合时宜的引用开始,这篇文章展示了琼斯小说中的连体和其他异常现象是如何促成三个关键的历史介入的。首先,结合实体的象征与奴隶在法律面前的双重和功能失调的地位联系在一起,即奴隶作为人与财产并存的法律身份。其次,“双头”作为质问战前法律所要求的精神杂技的手段。具体地说,琼斯创造了一个极度矛盾的执法者——我认为他是两个头脑的警长——来探索管理一个荒谬的法律范式所需要的心理努力。最后,也是最重要的一点,琼斯对联合实体的隐喻,阐明了虚构的弗吉尼亚州曼彻斯特县法律和经济相互联系、相互依存的运作。在美国历史上,双头鸡与一种更有利可图的结合联系在一起——也就是琼斯所说的奴隶制的“法律事务”。
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The Law's Business: Peculiar Profits in Edward Jones'sThe Known World
This essay examines Edward Jones’s radical historiography in The Known World (2003), specifically how he represents law as a mercurial, illogical, and generative force in the workings of American slavery. Centrally, Jones highlights the viability and profitability of the American nineteenth-century legal system’s absurdities. The essay extends current scholarship to reckon with a central tension in Jones’s novel: his linking of the quotidian with the bizarre. Jones’s understated realism is, paradoxically, rife with freakish phenomenon, from two-headed chickens to cannibalistic lawmen, and his juxtaposition of the commonplace and the freakish compels readers to recognize the absurd and potent powers of American slave law. Beginning with Jones’s anachronistic reference to a historian and a local story of two-headed chickens, the essay shows how conjoined entities and other anomalous phenomenon in Jones’s novel enable three key historiographic interventions. First, the symbol of conjoined entities connects with the dual and dysfunctional status of slaves before the law—namely, a slave’s legal identity as coexistent person and property. Second, “two-headedness” serves as means to interrogate the mental acrobatics necessitated by antebellum law. Specifically, Jones creates an intensely ambivalent officer of the law—a sheriff of two minds, I argue—to explore the psychological exertions needed to administer a nonsensical legal paradigm. Finally, and most importantly, Jones’s metaphors of conjoined entities illuminate the interconnected, interdependent workings of law and economics in fictional Manchester County, Virginia. Two-headed chickens link with a far more profitable conjoining in American history—namely, what Jones calls “the law’s business” in slavery.
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来源期刊
MELUS
MELUS LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
50.00%
发文量
59
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