Slavery, Geography and Empire in Nineteenth-Century Marine Landscapes of Montreal and Jamaica
Autor Charmaine A. Nelsonen Limba Engleză Paperback – 11 sep 2019
Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
---|---|---|
Paperback (1) | 265.87 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
Taylor & Francis – 11 sep 2019 | 265.87 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
Hardback (1) | 879.94 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
Taylor & Francis – 28 iul 2016 | 879.94 lei 6-8 săpt. |
Preț: 265.87 lei
Preț vechi: 315.29 lei
-16% Nou
Puncte Express: 399
Preț estimativ în valută:
50.88€ • 53.75$ • 42.54£
50.88€ • 53.75$ • 42.54£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 01-15 ianuarie 25
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780367432713
ISBN-10: 0367432714
Pagini: 444
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0367432714
Pagini: 444
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Cuprins
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Slavery studies and its absences
Contesting the erasure of black Canada and Canadian slavery
Postcolonial geography: Understanding landscapes as racialized
The case of two islands: Comparing Montreal and Jamaica
Societies-with-slaves vs. slave societies
Montreal and Jamaica: Colonized landscapes
The chapters
Terminology
1 Colonialism and art: Landscape and empire
Critical geography and art history: Of landscape representation, imperialism, and power
Art-making as empire-making: Whiteness, travel, and imperial vision
Montreal and Jamaica: Imperial connections
Transoceanic art
Maps, landscape painting, and topographical ,landscapes
2 A tale of two empires: Montreal slavery under the French and the British
A transition of power: From French to British slavery
Liminal bodies: "Loose" women, drunken soldiers, and vagrancy
Adapting slavery under the British
Situating Montreal’s black minority
The face of slave ownership in Montreal: James McGill
3 Representing the enslaved African in Montreal
Portraiture and slavery
Geographical alienation and the hierarchy of enslavement
Marie-Thérèse-Zémire, revolutionary St. Domingue, and the politics of flight
Critiquing Canadian museum practice: The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts’ installation of Portrait of a Haitian Woman
The conditions of African enslavement in eighteenth-century Montreal and St. Domingue
Life after François: "Portrait" of a Montreal slave mistress
Minuets of the Canadians and African Cultural Survivals
The tambourine
Connecting black Canadian music to the African diaspora
4 Landscaping Montreal
Montreal as British Military Stronghold
Re-Imagining Montreal as a Colonial Trade and Slave Port
St. Helen’s Island
5 Landscaping Jamaica
John Seller’s Atlas Maritimus: Jamaica in the early modern British imagination
Sloane’s natural history
The Beckfordesque landscape tradition
Beckford, slavery, and sugar cultivation
The picturesque and Beckford’s debt to European landscape (painting)
The planter’s vantage point: The tropical picturesque
6 Imaging slavery in Antigua and Jamaica: Pro-slavery discourse and the reality of enslavement
William Clark’s Antigua
The tropical picturesque as pro-slavery discourse
Thomas Thistlewood and Vineyard Pen
White male sexual exploitation of black women
Thomas Thistlewood, Agostino Brunias, and cross-racial sexual relations in the Caribbean
The price of excess: white male promiscuity and the spread of venereal disease
The state of Jamaican slavery
7 James Hakewill’s Picturesque Tour: Representing life on nineteenth-century Jamaican sugar plantations
Sugar cane or slaves: Representing and sublimating labour
William Clark’s labouring slaves
Animalizing slaves, humanizing animals
James Hakewill’s white women
"I am the Only Woman": Politeness and the erasure of black and coloured women
Riding side-saddle: White femininity, modernity, and privilege
8 Beyond Sugar: James Hakewill’s vision of Jamaican settlements, livestock pens, and the spaces between
Caretaking animals: Identity and penkeeping
The limits of mobility and the pervasiveness of surveillance: Exploring wainage
"Other" whites: Representing British soldiers in the Caribbean
White anxiety: Cross-racial mixing and coloured populations
Conclusion: Deception in the life and art of the white Jamaican creole planter class
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Slavery studies and its absences
Contesting the erasure of black Canada and Canadian slavery
Postcolonial geography: Understanding landscapes as racialized
The case of two islands: Comparing Montreal and Jamaica
Societies-with-slaves vs. slave societies
Montreal and Jamaica: Colonized landscapes
The chapters
Terminology
1 Colonialism and art: Landscape and empire
Critical geography and art history: Of landscape representation, imperialism, and power
Art-making as empire-making: Whiteness, travel, and imperial vision
Montreal and Jamaica: Imperial connections
Transoceanic art
Maps, landscape painting, and topographical ,landscapes
2 A tale of two empires: Montreal slavery under the French and the British
A transition of power: From French to British slavery
Liminal bodies: "Loose" women, drunken soldiers, and vagrancy
Adapting slavery under the British
Situating Montreal’s black minority
The face of slave ownership in Montreal: James McGill
3 Representing the enslaved African in Montreal
Portraiture and slavery
Geographical alienation and the hierarchy of enslavement
Marie-Thérèse-Zémire, revolutionary St. Domingue, and the politics of flight
Critiquing Canadian museum practice: The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts’ installation of Portrait of a Haitian Woman
The conditions of African enslavement in eighteenth-century Montreal and St. Domingue
Life after François: "Portrait" of a Montreal slave mistress
Minuets of the Canadians and African Cultural Survivals
The tambourine
Connecting black Canadian music to the African diaspora
4 Landscaping Montreal
Montreal as British Military Stronghold
Re-Imagining Montreal as a Colonial Trade and Slave Port
St. Helen’s Island
5 Landscaping Jamaica
John Seller’s Atlas Maritimus: Jamaica in the early modern British imagination
Sloane’s natural history
The Beckfordesque landscape tradition
Beckford, slavery, and sugar cultivation
The picturesque and Beckford’s debt to European landscape (painting)
The planter’s vantage point: The tropical picturesque
6 Imaging slavery in Antigua and Jamaica: Pro-slavery discourse and the reality of enslavement
William Clark’s Antigua
The tropical picturesque as pro-slavery discourse
Thomas Thistlewood and Vineyard Pen
White male sexual exploitation of black women
Thomas Thistlewood, Agostino Brunias, and cross-racial sexual relations in the Caribbean
The price of excess: white male promiscuity and the spread of venereal disease
The state of Jamaican slavery
7 James Hakewill’s Picturesque Tour: Representing life on nineteenth-century Jamaican sugar plantations
Sugar cane or slaves: Representing and sublimating labour
William Clark’s labouring slaves
Animalizing slaves, humanizing animals
James Hakewill’s white women
"I am the Only Woman": Politeness and the erasure of black and coloured women
Riding side-saddle: White femininity, modernity, and privilege
8 Beyond Sugar: James Hakewill’s vision of Jamaican settlements, livestock pens, and the spaces between
Caretaking animals: Identity and penkeeping
The limits of mobility and the pervasiveness of surveillance: Exploring wainage
"Other" whites: Representing British soldiers in the Caribbean
White anxiety: Cross-racial mixing and coloured populations
Conclusion: Deception in the life and art of the white Jamaican creole planter class
Notă biografică
Charmaine A. Nelson is Professor of Art History, Department of Art History and Communication Studies, McGill University, Canada.
Recenzii
'Charmaine A. Nelson's compelling and innovative reading of British Caribbean marine landscapes in Montreal and Jamaica (1760-1820) expands slavery studies and the visual culture of slavery to consider for the first time a second Middle Passage between the Caribbean and Canada. She thus expands the traditional slave trade triangle to now include Great Britain, the West Indies, and Canada. Her erudite and rich analysis of visual culture combined with postcolonial feminist theory is a major contribution to readers in a myriad of fields.'
- Vivien Green Fryd, Vanderbilt University, USA
'Charmaine Nelson's keen analysis reveals her sharp intellect as she addresses the realities of racism in Canada and the Caribbean: the absences, the distortions and the erasures that stifled black voices suffering the opprobrium of slavery. Canada somehow, willfully, disappeared from Atlantic slavery, from the shameful, painful collective history that encompassed all of us. This is a "big book", and though its focus is visual arts, it is multidisciplinary and universal in its scope.'
- Patrick Bellegarde-Smith, Professor emeritus, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA
'Slavery, Geography and Empire in Nineteenth-Century Marine Landscapes of Montreal and Jamaica is a deeply researched and complex book. ...[Nelson's] comparative project signals her position as scholarly activist and practitioner of a hybrid art history that incorporates a close attending to the visuals, a concern for what is seen and not seen, and a self-reflexivity concerning how the author positions herself. Throughout the book, one senses her outrage and indictment of the slavery complex as well as her commitment to telling a new story about the visualization and imaginings of slavery, geography, and empire in the nineteenth-century colonial world of Montreal and Jamaica.'
- RACAR
'In this prolific and compelling study, Nelson draws from an impressive body of visual and textual sources to argue for a deeply entrenched set of geopolitical, commercial, and social connectivities between two key colonial ports of the British Atlantic....Nelson’s study works to interrupt dominant narratives of place and nationhood, and its address to an expansive range of geographies, images, texts, and histories should provide myriad openings for future studies on slavery and empire across disciplines.'
- CAA Reviews
- Vivien Green Fryd, Vanderbilt University, USA
'Charmaine Nelson's keen analysis reveals her sharp intellect as she addresses the realities of racism in Canada and the Caribbean: the absences, the distortions and the erasures that stifled black voices suffering the opprobrium of slavery. Canada somehow, willfully, disappeared from Atlantic slavery, from the shameful, painful collective history that encompassed all of us. This is a "big book", and though its focus is visual arts, it is multidisciplinary and universal in its scope.'
- Patrick Bellegarde-Smith, Professor emeritus, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA
'Slavery, Geography and Empire in Nineteenth-Century Marine Landscapes of Montreal and Jamaica is a deeply researched and complex book. ...[Nelson's] comparative project signals her position as scholarly activist and practitioner of a hybrid art history that incorporates a close attending to the visuals, a concern for what is seen and not seen, and a self-reflexivity concerning how the author positions herself. Throughout the book, one senses her outrage and indictment of the slavery complex as well as her commitment to telling a new story about the visualization and imaginings of slavery, geography, and empire in the nineteenth-century colonial world of Montreal and Jamaica.'
- RACAR
'In this prolific and compelling study, Nelson draws from an impressive body of visual and textual sources to argue for a deeply entrenched set of geopolitical, commercial, and social connectivities between two key colonial ports of the British Atlantic....Nelson’s study works to interrupt dominant narratives of place and nationhood, and its address to an expansive range of geographies, images, texts, and histories should provide myriad openings for future studies on slavery and empire across disciplines.'
- CAA Reviews
Descriere
This book re-connects the two island colonies of Montreal and Jamaica, sites with economic and military value. Delivering one of the first slavery studies books to juxtapose temperate and tropical slavery and the first such comparative work in art history, Nelson explores how vision and cartographic knowledge translated into visual authority.