Selling the American Body: The Construction of American Identity Through the Slave Trade

In this thesis I argue that the early conceptualization of American identity was achieved through the dehumanization of blacks at slave auctions, and that the subjugation of this group informed more areas of the collective, normalized, American identity than just race. I contend that blacks were dep...

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Main Author: Plumpton, Max W.
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/6356
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7552&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-75522017-08-30T05:47:03Z Selling the American Body: The Construction of American Identity Through the Slave Trade Plumpton, Max W. In this thesis I argue that the early conceptualization of American identity was achieved through the dehumanization of blacks at slave auctions, and that the subjugation of this group informed more areas of the collective, normalized, American identity than just race. I contend that blacks were deprived of qualities that are considered inherently human (and American) and reduced to the facts of their bodies. To do this, I analyze newspaper advertisements for slave auctions, abolitionist editorials, and postings for runaway slaves. I also look at primary accounts of slave auctions that speak to the performative nature of the setting. I analyze the former set of texts to see how black bodies, in the context of their sale at auction, are discursively constructed in print media. In regard to the latter set of texts I discuss how slaves auctions mimicked theatrical settings, and how this staging and spectacularization of black bodies influenced the creation of a collective national identity. I argue that the emphasis on the slave’s body in newspapers and the spectacle of it on the auction block function to dehumanize blacks in such a significant manner that they become distinct from their free, white counterparts in ways that go beyond racial difference. This thesis expands on scholarship that considers the influence the institution of slavery had the normalizing of whiteness in America by positing that characteristics fundamental to American identity, such as individualism and creativity, were also established through the dehumanization of the blacks. 2016-03-25T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/6356 http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7552&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons Frontier Myth Freakery Performance Embodiment Communication
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Frontier Myth
Freakery
Performance
Embodiment
Communication
spellingShingle Frontier Myth
Freakery
Performance
Embodiment
Communication
Plumpton, Max W.
Selling the American Body: The Construction of American Identity Through the Slave Trade
description In this thesis I argue that the early conceptualization of American identity was achieved through the dehumanization of blacks at slave auctions, and that the subjugation of this group informed more areas of the collective, normalized, American identity than just race. I contend that blacks were deprived of qualities that are considered inherently human (and American) and reduced to the facts of their bodies. To do this, I analyze newspaper advertisements for slave auctions, abolitionist editorials, and postings for runaway slaves. I also look at primary accounts of slave auctions that speak to the performative nature of the setting. I analyze the former set of texts to see how black bodies, in the context of their sale at auction, are discursively constructed in print media. In regard to the latter set of texts I discuss how slaves auctions mimicked theatrical settings, and how this staging and spectacularization of black bodies influenced the creation of a collective national identity. I argue that the emphasis on the slave’s body in newspapers and the spectacle of it on the auction block function to dehumanize blacks in such a significant manner that they become distinct from their free, white counterparts in ways that go beyond racial difference. This thesis expands on scholarship that considers the influence the institution of slavery had the normalizing of whiteness in America by positing that characteristics fundamental to American identity, such as individualism and creativity, were also established through the dehumanization of the blacks.
author Plumpton, Max W.
author_facet Plumpton, Max W.
author_sort Plumpton, Max W.
title Selling the American Body: The Construction of American Identity Through the Slave Trade
title_short Selling the American Body: The Construction of American Identity Through the Slave Trade
title_full Selling the American Body: The Construction of American Identity Through the Slave Trade
title_fullStr Selling the American Body: The Construction of American Identity Through the Slave Trade
title_full_unstemmed Selling the American Body: The Construction of American Identity Through the Slave Trade
title_sort selling the american body: the construction of american identity through the slave trade
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2016
url http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/6356
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7552&context=etd
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