Engendering Islands : Sexuality, Reproduction, and Violence in the Early French Caribbean
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
Women and Gender in the Early Modern World
ISBN-10
1496220242
ISBN-13
9781496220240
Publisher
University of Nebraska Press
Imprint
University of Nebraska Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Jun 1st, 2021
Print length
277 Pages
Weight
622 grams
Dimensions
16.00 x 23.60 x 2.70 cms
Product Classification:
Literature: history & criticismEuropean historyGender studies, gender groups
Ksh 9,700.00
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In seventeenth-century Antilles the violence of dispossession and enslavement was mapped onto men’s and women’s bodies, bolstered by resignified tropes of gender, repurposed concepts of disability, and emerging racial discourses. As colonials and ecclesiastics developed local practices and institutions-particularly family formation and military force-they consolidated old notions into new categories that affected all social groups. In Engendering Islands Ashley M. Williard argues that early Caribbean reconstructions of masculinity and femininity sustained occupation, slavery, and nascent ideas of race. In the face of historical silences, Williard’s close readings of archival and narrative texts reveals the words, images, and perspectives that reflected and produced new ideas of human difference. Juridical, religious, and medical discourses expose the interdependence of multiple conditions-male and female, enslaved and free, Black and white, Indigenous and displaced, normative and disabled-in the islands claimed for the French Crown. In recent years scholars have interrogated key aspects of Atlantic slavery, but none have systematically approached the archive of gender, particularly as it intersects with race and disability, in the seventeenth-century French Caribbean. The constructions of masculinity and femininity embedded in this early colonial context help elucidate attendant notions of otherness and the systems of oppression they sustained. Williard shows the ways gender contributed to and complicated emerging notions of racial difference that justified slavery and colonial domination, thus setting the stage for centuries of French imperialism.
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