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"The Labor of (re)Reading Plantation Landscapes Fungible(ly)" in Antipode, 1-18

"The Labor of (re)Reading Plantation Landscapes Fungible(ly)" in Antipode, 1-18

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"The Labor of (re)Reading Plantation Landscapes Fungible(ly)" in Antipode, 1-18

This article centers Saidiya Hartman's and Hortense Spillers' theorizations of Black fungibility as well as two speculative visual works in order to read Black bodies on plantation landscapes as symbols of transition, process, genderlessness and boundarylessness. I argue that reading Black bodies in this way breaks with the totalizing visual, conceptual and ontological regime of labor that tends to over determine Blackness within critical theories. Two visual fields help me with this counter read: William Gerrard De Brahm's 1757 “Map of South Carolina and a Part of Georgia”, as well as Julie Dash's 1991 images of the porous indigo‐stained hands of former slaves who worked indigo in the film Daughters of the Dust. While these two images oppose one another, their visual conventions enable a break with colonial and humanist scopic regimes like “Black labor” that tend to subsume multiple and intricate processes into the governing logic of labor.

About the Author

Tiffany Lethabo King is an associate professor in the African-American Studies, and Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Departments at Georgia State University. Her research focuses on the intersectionality of slavery and indigenous genocide in the Americas.

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