The Claim of Right to Property: Social Violence and Political Right

Author:

Douglass Patrice D.1

Affiliation:

1. Community and Leadership Program , Saint Mary’s College of CA , Moraga , CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract This article offers a close reading of The Order of Things by Michael Foucault and The Human Condition by Hannah Arendt, to argue that the positioning of the Human within scientific and political thought necessitates an underscoring of violence as it relates to blackness. This position interrogates how Arendt positions slavery in the Greek polis and the Roman res republica to establish her foci on modern political life. I offer an analysis of Prigg v. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, as complicating Arendt’s political dichotomy, by shifting focus to the legal history of US American slavery. Prigg rewrites and establishes the demarcations of US Federal and State law. However, the majority opinion and dissents make fleeting reference to the fugitive slave in question, Margaret Morgan, and the possibility that she may have been sexually violated while being forcibly returned to slavery. I conclude that the contours of this case, specifically the erasure of sexual violence, demonstrate how racial slavery provides contexts to modern political life not explored by Arendt’s primary concern with slavery in antiquity.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference14 articles.

1. Arendt, Hannah (1958). The Human Condition. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

2. Broeck, Sabine (2008). “Enslavement as Regime of Western Modernity: Re-reading Gender Studies Epistemology through Black Feminist Critique.” Gender Forum: An Internet Journal for Gender Studies 22, 1–5. (January 24, 2017).

3. Derrida, Jacques (1990). “Force of Law: The ‘Mystical Foundation of Authority.’” Trans. Mary Quaintance. Cardozo Law Review 11.5–6, 921–1045.

4. Eversley, Shelly, Farah Jasmine Griffin, Saidiya Hartman, Jennifer L. Morgan and Hortense Spillers (2007). “‘Whatcha Gonna Do?’: Revisiting ‘Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe: An American Grammar Book’: A Conversation with Hortense Spillers, Saidiya Hartman, Farah Jasmine Griffin, Shelly Eversley, and Jennifer L. Morgan.” Women’s Studies Quarterly 35.1–2, 299–309.

5. Fanon, Frantz (1967). Black Skin, White Masks. Trans. Charles Markmann. New York, NY: Grove.

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