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Arbitrary Rule Slavery Tyranny And The Power Of Life And Death Illustrated Mary Nyquist

  • SKU: BELL-43828206
Arbitrary Rule Slavery Tyranny And The Power Of Life And Death Illustrated Mary Nyquist
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Arbitrary Rule Slavery Tyranny And The Power Of Life And Death Illustrated Mary Nyquist instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Chicago Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 29.61 MB
Pages: 440
Author: Mary Nyquist
ISBN: 9780226015538, 022601553X
Language: English
Year: 2013
Edition: Illustrated

Product desciption

Arbitrary Rule Slavery Tyranny And The Power Of Life And Death Illustrated Mary Nyquist by Mary Nyquist 9780226015538, 022601553X instant download after payment.

Slavery appears as a figurative construct during the English revolution of the mid-seventeenth century, and again in the American and French revolutions, when radicals represent their treatment as a form of political slavery. What, if anything, does figurative, political slavery have to do with transatlantic slavery? In Arbitrary Rule, Mary Nyquist explores connections between political and chattel slavery by excavating the tradition of Western political thought that justifies actively opposing tyranny. She argues that as powerful rhetorical and conceptual constructs, Greco-Roman political liberty and slavery reemerge at the time of early modern Eurocolonial expansion; they help to create racialized “free” national identities and their “unfree” counterparts in non-European nations represented as inhabiting an earlier, privative age.               
Arbitrary Rule is the first book to tackle political slavery’s discursive complexity, engaging Eurocolonialism, political philosophy, and literary studies, areas of study too often kept apart. Nyquist proceeds through analyses not only of texts that are canonical in political thought—by Aristotle, Cicero, Hobbes, and Locke—but also of literary works by Euripides, Buchanan, Vondel, Montaigne, and Milton, together with a variety of colonialist and political writings, with special emphasis on tracts written during the English revolution. She illustrates how “antityranny discourse,” which originated in democratic Athens, was adopted by republican Rome, and revived in early modern Western Europe, provided members of a “free” community with a means of protesting a threatened reduction of privileges or of consolidating a collective, political identity. Its semantic complexity, however, also enabled it to legitimize racialized enslavement and imperial expansion. 

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