Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Peculiar Nature: Slavery, Environment, and Nationalism in the Antebellum South.

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dc.contributor Parrish, Susan Scott
dc.contributor Howard, June M.
dc.contributor Larson, Kerry C.
dc.contributor Stern, Alexandra
dc.creator LaFauci, Lauren E.
dc.date 2009-09-03T14:51:44Z
dc.date NO_RESTRICTION
dc.date 2009-09-03T14:51:44Z
dc.date 2009
dc.date
dc.date.accessioned 2022-05-19T13:29:13Z
dc.date.available 2022-05-19T13:29:13Z
dc.identifier https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/63797
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/117229
dc.description Peculiar Nature makes a tripartite intervention in the fields of American literary, cultural, environmental, and medical history. It argues, first, that white southerners in the pre-Civil War period imagined their environments as regionally distinct from those of the northern states. Because of contemporary beliefs about the porousness of bodies relative to external environments, white southerners’ conception of environmental distinctiveness led to an imagination of bodily distinctiveness. Yet while white southerners saw the environment as the source of their individual and collective bodily difference, they did not extend its influence to the region’s enslaved people, whose difference, they argued, stemmed from their separate racial origins. As they sought somehow to reconcile these two contradictory viewpoints about the sources of racial and bodily difference, white southerners underwent a number of scientific and literary contortions in order to justify and uphold the institution of race-based enslavement. Second, Peculiar Nature aims to make visible the ideological production of “the South” against the everyday experience of “many Souths”—that is, to show how local productions of knowledge about the southern natural world worked alongside (and, sometimes, against) national, ideological productions about southern nature. Finally, this dissertation claims that a south-side view of these attitudes toward environment, bodies, and nationhood changes the way we teach and conduct scholarship about “nature” during the period, uncovering white and black southerners’ materialist imaginations of their region’s natural resources. Peculiar Nature’s chapters take up in turn climatic theories, plants, mineral waters, and swamplands in order to explain how white southerners’ conceptions of their region’s “natural” exceptionality eventually strengthened their commitment to an environmentally informed racism, and, thus, to a system of race-based enslavement. This environmentalist commitment enabled them to develop a unified white “southern” identity that preceded (and indeed, fomented) the creation of the Confederacy, elided black bodily difference and presence, and relied upon notions of a bountiful and materially valuable southern nature. Ultimately, in framing southern nationalism in relation to southern environments, Peculiar Nature demonstrates how seemingly benign attitudes toward the natural world metamorphosed into “scientific” justifications for black enslavement and for a nation-state founded upon white superiority.
dc.description Ph.D.
dc.description English Language & Literature
dc.description University of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies
dc.description http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63797/1/llafauci_1.pdf
dc.format 30102080 bytes
dc.format 1373 bytes
dc.format application/pdf
dc.format text/plain
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en_US
dc.subject Slavery
dc.subject Southern States (U.S.)
dc.subject Nature
dc.subject Mineral Waters
dc.subject Plants
dc.subject Environmental Justice
dc.subject African-American Studies
dc.subject American and Canadian Studies
dc.subject English Language and Literature
dc.subject History (General)
dc.subject Humanities
dc.title Peculiar Nature: Slavery, Environment, and Nationalism in the Antebellum South.
dc.type Thesis


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