首页> 外文OA文献 >Infinite Worlds: Eighteenth-Century London, the Atlantic Ocean, and Post-Slavery in S.I. Martin's Incomparable World, Lawrence Hill's The Book of Negroes, David Dabydeen's A Harlot's Progress, and Thomas Wharton's Salamander
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Infinite Worlds: Eighteenth-Century London, the Atlantic Ocean, and Post-Slavery in S.I. Martin's Incomparable World, Lawrence Hill's The Book of Negroes, David Dabydeen's A Harlot's Progress, and Thomas Wharton's Salamander

机译:无限世界:十八世纪的伦敦,大西洋和圣马丁的无与伦比的奴隶制世界,劳伦斯·希尔的《黑人之书》,大卫·达比丁的《哈罗特的进步》和托马斯·沃顿的《 am》

摘要

In Black London: Life before Emancipation (1995), Gretchen Holbrook Gerzina writes of how, on discovering that 15,000 Africans and their descendants were living in London in 1768, she was struck by a vision of her present-day London as 'suddenly occupied by two simultaneous centuries' (2) - an eighteenth-century city of black pageboys and entertainers, of black beggars and prostitutes and autobiographers, overlaying the late twentieth-century one like a ghostly palimpsest. In the same decade as Gerzina was articulating these spectral imaginings, four prominent black British novelists were similarly looking back to the eighteenth century - to the final decades of the British slave trade, to the Atlantic Ocean across and around which it took place, and to London, where the abolitionist cause was advanced. Caryl Phillips, S.I. Martin, David Dabydeen, and Fred D'Aguiar all published novels in the 1990s that have black protagonists and are set entirely or partly in the eighteenth-century metropolis. In the subsequent decade, two Canadian novelists did likewise: Lawrence Hill and Thomas Wharton both published historical novels featuring female ex-slaves that end up in London after long and circuitous oceanic journeys.[i] Since historical novels are always prompted by present-tense obsessions and therefore frequently gaze at two centuries simultaneously, how does this outpouring of eighteenth-century-oriented narrative reflect and enhance our contemporary understanding of slavery, the Atlantic world, and London? What geographies and identities, what forms of mobility and dwelling, what personal quests and local or global communities do these novels imagine for the imperial capital's black inhabitants at a time when the prevailing winds were blowing abolition and revolutionary political change across the Atlantic world? And how do these texts - transhistorical, transnational, circum-Atlantic visions of London echo - or anticipate - other postcolonial writings about the world city of our time and the black person's place in it?
机译:格雷琴·霍尔布鲁克·格齐纳(Gretchen Holbrook Gerzina)在《黑色伦敦:解放前的生活》(1995)中写道,在发现1768年有15,000名非洲人及其后裔居住在伦敦时,她对今天的伦敦突然被“占领”的愿景感到震惊。同时发生的两个世纪(2)-一个十八世纪的城市,黑人的黑人男子和演艺人员,黑人的乞g,妓女和自传作者,像一个幽灵般的苍白的人一样,覆盖了二十世纪末的城市。在Gerzina阐明这些光谱想象的同一十年中,四位杰出的黑人英国小说家同样地回顾了18世纪-到英国奴隶贸易的最后几十年,到横跨其发生的大西洋,以及废奴主义事业在伦敦发展。 Caryl Phillips,S.I。Martin,David Dabydeen和Fred D'Aguiar都在1990年代出版过小说,这些小说都带有黑人主角,全部或部分地出现在18世纪的大都市中。在随后的十年中,两位加拿大小说家也这样做了:劳伦斯·希尔(Lawrence Hill)和托马斯·沃顿(Thomas Wharton)都出版了以女性前奴隶身份为特征的历史小说,这些小说在经历了漫长而曲折的海洋之旅后最终在伦敦出现。如此迷恋,并因此经常同时凝视两个世纪,这种十八世纪的叙事方式如何泛滥,如何反映和增强我们对奴隶制,大西洋世界和伦敦的当代理解?在整个大西洋风潮席卷全球废除奴隶制和革命性政治变革之际,这些小说对帝国首都的黑人居民而言,这些小说对什么样的地理位置和身份,什么样的流动性和居住方式以及对当地或全球社区的想象?这些文字-跨历史,跨国,环大西洋的伦敦构想如何与-或预期-有关我们时代的世界城市以及黑人在其中的位置的其他后殖民著作?

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    Clement Ball John;

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