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"A fascinating, if disturbing, window onto the origins of racism."
-Publishers Weekly "The eighteenth-century essays published for the
first time in Who's Black and Why? contain a world of
ideas-theories, inventions, and fantasies-about what blackness is,
and what it means. To read them is to witness European
intellectuals, in the age of the Atlantic slave trade, struggling,
one after another, to justify atrocity." -Jill Lepore, author of
These Truths: A History of the United States The first translation
and publication of sixteen submissions to the notorious
eighteenth-century Bordeaux essay contest on the cause of black
skin-an indispensable chronicle of the rise of scientifically
based, anti-Black racism. In 1739 Bordeaux's Royal Academy of
Sciences announced a contest for the best essay on the sources of
"blackness." What is the physical cause of blackness and African
hair, and what is the cause of Black degeneration, the contest
announcement asked. Sixteen essays, written in French and Latin,
were ultimately dispatched from all over Europe. The authors ranged
from naturalists to physicians, theologians to amateur savants.
Documented on each page are European ideas about who is Black and
why. Looming behind these essays is the fact that some four million
Africans had been kidnapped and shipped across the Atlantic by the
time the contest was announced. The essays themselves represent a
broad range of opinions. Some affirm that Africans had fallen from
God's grace; others that blackness had resulted from a brutal
climate; still others emphasized the anatomical specificity of
Africans. All the submissions nonetheless circulate around a common
theme: the search for a scientific understanding of the new concept
of race. More important, they provide an indispensable record of
the Enlightenment-era thinking that normalized the sale and
enslavement of Black human beings. These never previously published
documents survived the centuries tucked away in Bordeaux's
municipal library. Translated into English and accompanied by a
detailed introduction and headnotes written by Henry Louis Gates,
Jr., and Andrew Curran, each essay included in this volume lays
bare the origins of anti-Black racism and colorism in the West.
This volume examines the Enlightenment-era textualization of the
Black African in European thought. Andrew S. Curran rewrites the
history of blackness by replicating the practices of
eighteenth-century readers. Surveying French and European
travelogues, natural histories, works of anatomy, pro- and
anti-slavery tracts, philosophical treatises, and literary texts,
Curran shows how naturalists and philosophes drew from travel
literature to discuss the perceived problem of human blackness
within the nascent human sciences, describes how a number of
now-forgotten anatomists revolutionized the era's understanding of
black Africans, and charts the shift of the slavery debate from the
moral, mercantile, and theological realms toward that of the "black
body" itself. In tracing this evolution, he shows how blackness
changed from a mere descriptor in earlier periods into a thing to
be measured, dissected, handled, and often brutalized. Penetrating
and comprehensive, The Anatomy of Blackness shows that, far from
being a monolithic idea, eighteenth-century Africanist discourse
emerged out of a vigorous, varied dialogue that involved
missionaries, slavers, colonists, naturalists, anatomists,
philosophers, and Africans themselves.
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