
Family Money explores the histories of formerly enslaved women who tried to claim inheritances left to them by deceased owners; the household traumas of mixed-race slaves; post-Emancipation calls for reparations; and the economic fallout from anti-miscegenation marriage laws. Authors ranging from Nathaniel Hawthorne, Frank Webb, and Harriet Beecher Stowe to Charles Chesnutt and Lydia Maria Child recognized that intimate interracial relationships took myriad forms, often simultaneously sexual, marital, coercive, familial, pleasurable, and painful. Their fiction confirms that the consequences of these relationships for nineteenth-century Americans meant thinking about more than the legal structure of racial identity. Who could count as family (and when); who could own property (and when); and how racial difference was imagined (and why) were emphatically bound together. Demonstrating that notions of race were entwined with economics well beyond the direct issue of slavery, Family Money reveals interracial sexuality to be a volatile mixture of emotion, economics, and law that had dramatic, long-term financial consequences.
This book investigates how nineteenth-century American literature and legal history reveal the inextricable link between interracial intimacy, property rights, and economic status. Jeffory A. Clymer, a scholar of American literary history, utilizes a combination of legal records, historical accounts of formerly enslaved individuals, and canonical literary texts to argue that racial identity in the nineteenth century was fundamentally shaped by economic structures. The work posits that the definition of family and the right to inherit property were sites of intense conflict that transcended the immediate institution of slavery.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of American literary history identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of how economic and legal frameworks inform literary representations of race. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's ability to synthesize disparate historical and literary sources into a cohesive argument.
Page Count:
216
Publication Date:
2014-12-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190223871
ISBN-13:
9780190223878
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