Reparative histories: tracing narratives of black resistance and white entitlement
Author(s) -
Cathy Bergin,
Anita Rupprecht
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
race and class
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.809
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 1741-3125
pISSN - 0306-3968
DOI - 10.1177/0306396818770853
Subject(s) - resistance (ecology) , white (mutation) , emancipation , entitlement (fair division) , politics , narrative , capitalism , white supremacy , agency (philosophy) , gender studies , racism , sociology , history , law , political science , social science , art , literature , ecology , mathematical economics , biology , gene , biochemistry , chemistry , mathematics
The reinvigoration of forms of white supremacy in the US and Europe has sharply delineated the connections between occluded racialised pasts and contemporary race politics in ways which make reparative history an urgent concern. This article argues that contemporary struggles over the politics of memorialisation telegraph more than a debate over contested histories. They are also signs of how the liberal narrative of ‘trauma’ and healing no longer suffices as a way of marginalising the history of radical black agency. Building on the research by the Legacies of British Slave-ownership project, the article focuses on the incendiary year of 1831 and on a moment of collision – between black resistance and white entitlement. It situates a hitherto overlooked aborted slave uprising in Tortola, British Virgin Islands, within its multiple radical Caribbean, Atlantic and British contexts as a way of disrupting the distance between histories confined to ‘there’ and those confined to ‘here’. The article explores how the link between slavery and capitalism can be connected concretely to the black claim made on the nature of that emancipation as a way of further developing the concept of reparative history.
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