Pitt on a Pedestal: Sculpture and Slavery in Late-Eighteenth-Century Charleston

被引:0
作者
Bellion, Wendy [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Delaware, Art Hist, Newark, DE 19716 USA
[2] Univ Delaware, Amer Art, Newark, DE 19716 USA
[3] Ctr Mat Culture Studies, Newark, DE 19711 USA
来源
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF AMERICAN STUDIES | 2019年 / 14卷 / 04期
关键词
statue; sculpture; neoclassicism; slavery; enslaved; race; Charleston; South Carolina; Civic Square; London; colonial; empire; place; location; site-specificity; built environment; William Pitt the Elder; Joseph Wilton; spectacle; spectator; Atlantic wor; SOUTH-CAROLINA;
D O I
10.4000/ejas.15410
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
On July 5, 1770, South Carolina raised its first public sculpture. Representing the English statesman William Pitt the Elder in the mode of a classical orator, the marble statue stood on a pedestal at the intersection of Meeting and Broad Streets, in Charleston's historic Civic Square. This essay reconstructs the significance of its location and its competing meanings within the colonial slave city. It examines how the statue functioned to reflect the racial politics of elite Charlestonians while illuminating the cultures of surveillance, discipline, and display that linked black and white bodies. At the symbolic center of the urban landscape, the figure of Pitt exposed the implicated nature of neoclassical sculpture and transatlantic slavery.
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页数:21
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