
Quantifiable citizenship in the form of birth certificates, census forms, and immigration quotas is so ubiquitous that today it appears ahistorical. Yet before the modern colonial era, there was neither a word for "population" in the sense of numbers of people, nor agreement that monarchs should count their subjects. Much of the work of naturalizing the view that people can be represented as populations took place far outside government institutions and philosophical treatises. It occurred instead in the work of colonial writers who found in the act of counting a way to imagine fixed boundaries between intermingling groups. Counting Bodies explores the imaginative, personal, and narrative writings that performed the cultural work of normalizing the enumeration of bodies. By repositioning and unearthing a literary pre-history of population science, the book shows that representing individuals as numbers was a central element of colonial projects. Early colonial writings that describe routine and even intimate interactions offer a window into the way people wove the quantifiable forms of subjectivity made available by population counts into everyday life. Whether trying to make sense of plantation slavery, frontier warfare, rapid migration, or global commerce, writers framed questions about human relationships across different cultures and generations in terms of population.
This book investigates how early colonial American writers normalized the concept of population and the enumeration of human bodies long before modern census practices were established. Molly Farrell, an associate professor of English, examines the literary pre-history of population science to argue that counting individuals was a fundamental component of colonial projects. By analyzing personal and narrative texts, she demonstrates how the act of quantifying people became a mechanism for establishing boundaries and managing social interactions in the colonial era.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of early American studies identify this work as a significant contribution to understanding the cultural origins of demographic thought. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the depth of the archival research presented.
Page Count:
292
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190607653
ISBN-13:
9780190607654
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