Chapter 11. Haunting slavery
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Lori Robison
Abstract
This chapter considers the disruptive power of two nineteenth-century literary scenes, one from Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852) and one from Lydia Maria Child’s A Romance of the Republic (1867), in which portrayals of enslaved women activate the emotions of readers while challenging the usual workings of sympathy. Drawing on the work of film theorist Todd McGowan, it locates in these scenes a Lacanian gaze that unsettles readers by looking back at them, creating an opportunity for them to see ideology as ideology. Through this approach, the chapter identifies a textual strategy that challenges slavery and racism while pushing back against the racial objectifications inherent in the dynamics of sympathy: a strategy that could ultimately intervene in the cultural construction of whiteness and blackness.
Abstract
This chapter considers the disruptive power of two nineteenth-century literary scenes, one from Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852) and one from Lydia Maria Child’s A Romance of the Republic (1867), in which portrayals of enslaved women activate the emotions of readers while challenging the usual workings of sympathy. Drawing on the work of film theorist Todd McGowan, it locates in these scenes a Lacanian gaze that unsettles readers by looking back at them, creating an opportunity for them to see ideology as ideology. Through this approach, the chapter identifies a textual strategy that challenges slavery and racism while pushing back against the racial objectifications inherent in the dynamics of sympathy: a strategy that could ultimately intervene in the cultural construction of whiteness and blackness.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Preface vii
- General introduction xi
- Slavery, literature and the emotions 1
-
Part One. Slavery, sentiment and affect
- Chapter 1. Slavery, sentimentality and the abolition of affect 18
- Chapter 2. Race and affect in Gustave de Beaumont’s Marie, ou L’esclavage aux Etats‑Unis 34
- Chapter 3. Touching difference and colonial space 50
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Part Two. Slavery between literary codes
- Chapter 4. In search of home 78
- Chapter 5. Showing and feeling the atrocities of slavery 95
- Chapter 6. Politics and faith, slavery and abolition in nineteenth-century Brazilian literature 110
- Chapter 7. Melodramatic tableaux vivants 136
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Part Three. Pity, identification and interpellation
- Chapter 8. Before sentimental empire 158
- Chapter 9. “No one can imagine my feelings” 173
- Chapter 10. Orientalism, slavery and emotion 191
- Chapter 11. Haunting slavery 207
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Part Four. Affective ties
- Chapter 12. Testamentary manumission and emotional bonds in eighteenth-century Saint-Domingue 226
- Chapter 13. Affection amidst domination in a post-slavery society 239
- Chapter 14. Bárbora and Jau 254
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Part Five. First-person voices
- Chapter 15. Scenes of emotion in French early-modern travel writing from the Caribbean 272
- Chapter 16. Fear and love in Matanzas 289
- Chapter 17. The blood-stained-gate 307
- Volume 1. Biographical descriptions 325
- Name index 331
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Preface vii
- General introduction xi
- Slavery, literature and the emotions 1
-
Part One. Slavery, sentiment and affect
- Chapter 1. Slavery, sentimentality and the abolition of affect 18
- Chapter 2. Race and affect in Gustave de Beaumont’s Marie, ou L’esclavage aux Etats‑Unis 34
- Chapter 3. Touching difference and colonial space 50
-
Part Two. Slavery between literary codes
- Chapter 4. In search of home 78
- Chapter 5. Showing and feeling the atrocities of slavery 95
- Chapter 6. Politics and faith, slavery and abolition in nineteenth-century Brazilian literature 110
- Chapter 7. Melodramatic tableaux vivants 136
-
Part Three. Pity, identification and interpellation
- Chapter 8. Before sentimental empire 158
- Chapter 9. “No one can imagine my feelings” 173
- Chapter 10. Orientalism, slavery and emotion 191
- Chapter 11. Haunting slavery 207
-
Part Four. Affective ties
- Chapter 12. Testamentary manumission and emotional bonds in eighteenth-century Saint-Domingue 226
- Chapter 13. Affection amidst domination in a post-slavery society 239
- Chapter 14. Bárbora and Jau 254
-
Part Five. First-person voices
- Chapter 15. Scenes of emotion in French early-modern travel writing from the Caribbean 272
- Chapter 16. Fear and love in Matanzas 289
- Chapter 17. The blood-stained-gate 307
- Volume 1. Biographical descriptions 325
- Name index 331