Divine Lynxes

Divine Lynxes: When the Middle Ages ended with the bubonic plague pandemic and the first iterations of wage labor began and merchant capital began to take hold, cats as symbols of economic power and economic disinheritance did not disappear, rather they were transformed. This chapter narrates in fel...

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Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Duke University Press 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478023883-005
https://read.dukeupress.edu/books/monograph/chapter-pdf/2009111/9781478023883-005.pdf
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spelling crdukeunivpr:10.1215/9781478023883-005 2024-06-02T08:06:43+00:00 Divine Lynxes 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478023883-005 https://read.dukeupress.edu/books/monograph/chapter-pdf/2009111/9781478023883-005.pdf unknown Duke University Press Marx for Cats page 95-124 ISBN 9781478023883 book-chapter 2023 crdukeunivpr https://doi.org/10.1215/9781478023883-005 2024-05-07T13:15:10Z Divine Lynxes: When the Middle Ages ended with the bubonic plague pandemic and the first iterations of wage labor began and merchant capital began to take hold, cats as symbols of economic power and economic disinheritance did not disappear, rather they were transformed. This chapter narrates in feline terms the conquest: The ship that delivered the first abducted Africans into Virginia was named The White Lion, a claim to both racial and regal power, and this ship introduces the trans-Atlantic slave trade, the largest forced migration in world history. White masters, white indentured servants, and Black slaves arrived into the thriving and diverse continent of First Nations America, and some of these nations traced their own lineage back to a cat—the Sky Lynx in the case of the Haudenosaunee. Book Part First Nations Lynx Duke University Press 95 124
institution Open Polar
collection Duke University Press
op_collection_id crdukeunivpr
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description Divine Lynxes: When the Middle Ages ended with the bubonic plague pandemic and the first iterations of wage labor began and merchant capital began to take hold, cats as symbols of economic power and economic disinheritance did not disappear, rather they were transformed. This chapter narrates in feline terms the conquest: The ship that delivered the first abducted Africans into Virginia was named The White Lion, a claim to both racial and regal power, and this ship introduces the trans-Atlantic slave trade, the largest forced migration in world history. White masters, white indentured servants, and Black slaves arrived into the thriving and diverse continent of First Nations America, and some of these nations traced their own lineage back to a cat—the Sky Lynx in the case of the Haudenosaunee.
format Book Part
title Divine Lynxes
spellingShingle Divine Lynxes
title_short Divine Lynxes
title_full Divine Lynxes
title_fullStr Divine Lynxes
title_full_unstemmed Divine Lynxes
title_sort divine lynxes
publisher Duke University Press
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478023883-005
https://read.dukeupress.edu/books/monograph/chapter-pdf/2009111/9781478023883-005.pdf
genre First Nations
Lynx
genre_facet First Nations
Lynx
op_source Marx for Cats
page 95-124
ISBN 9781478023883
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1215/9781478023883-005
container_start_page 95
op_container_end_page 124
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