Fr. 236.00

Human Insufficiency - Natural Slavery Racialization of Vulnerability in Early Modern

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 1 a 3 settimane (non disponibile a breve termine)

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

Human Insufficiency argues that early modern writers depict the human political subject as physically vulnerable in order to naturalize slavery. Representations of Man as a weak creature-"poor" and "bare" in King Lear's words-strategically portrayed English bodies as needing care from people who were imagined to be less fragile. Drawing on Aristotle's depictions of the natural master and the natural slave in the Politics, English writers distinguished the fully human political subject from the sub-human Slave who would care for his feeble body. This justification of a nascent slaving economy reinvents the violence of enslaving Afro-diasporic peoples as a natural system of care. Human Insufficiency's most important contribution to early modern critical race studies is expanding the scope of the human as a racialized category by demonstrating how depictions of Man as a vulnerable species were part of a discourse racializing slavery.

Sommario

Preface

Introduction

  1. Frail Humanity in King Lear and Early Modern Aristotelian Political Thought
2. Human Vulnerability and Natural Slavery in The Faerie Queene
3. Servitude and Human Negative Exceptionalism in Montaigne, La Boétie, and The Duchess of Malfi
4. Unnatural Slavery and the Protection of White Women in Cavendish's Assaulted and Pursued Chastity
5. Coda: Materializing Race and Salvaging Vulnerability in Jemisin's Broken Earth Trilogy

Bibliography

Index

Info autore

Jeffrey B. Griswold is a scholar of early modern literature and political philosophy. His work has been published in Exemplaria, Studies in Philology, Renaissance Drama, Spenser Studies, The Spenser Review, and Critical Survey.

Riassunto

By depicting the human political subject as exceptionally vulnerable, literary and philosophical writers portrayed the English as needing care from bodies imagined to be less than human in their physical sufficiency and therefore predisposed to servitude.

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