EVERYBODY'S GOT A LITTLE LIGHT UNDER THE SUN Black luminosity and the visual culture of surveillance

被引:24
作者
Browne, Simone [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Austin, Dept Sociol, Austin, TX 78712 USA
[2] Univ Texas Austin, Dept African & African Diaspora Studies, Austin, TX 78712 USA
关键词
The Book of Negroes; surveillance; slavery; passports; American Revolution; Black Canada;
D O I
10.1080/09502386.2011.644573
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
This article examines the production of The Book of Negroes during the British evacuation of New York in 1783 and situates it as the first government-issued document for state regulated migration between the United States and Canada that explicitly links corporeal identifiers to the right to travel. I do this to argue that the body made legible with the modern passport system has a history in the technologies of tracking blackness. I explore surveillance technologies of transatlantic slavery, namely lantern laws, and I examine arbitration that took place at Fraunces Tavern in New York City in 1783 between fugitive slaves exercising mobility rights claims by seeking to be included in The Book of Negroes and those who claimed them as property. Coupling the archive of The Book of Negroes with a discussion of rituals and practices engaged by free and enslaved blacks, I suggest that these interactions with surveillance served as both strategies of coping and critique, and in so being represent acts of freedom. This article begins with a story of black escape by taking up the surveillance-based reality television programme Mantracker to question how certain technologies instituted through slavery to track blackness as property anticipate the contemporary surveillance of the racial body.
引用
收藏
页码:542 / 564
页数:23
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