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Ian
Baucom, Specters
of the Atlantic. Durham,
NC: Duke University Press,
2005. x
+ 387pp; illus. $84.95 (Hdbk;
ISBN-10: 0-8223-3558-1; ISBN-13:
978-0-8223-3558-0); $23.95
(Pbk; ISBN-10:0-8223-3596-4;
ISBN-13: 978-0-8223-3596-2).
Bibliographic
Citation:
Rispoli, S. Adair, et al. "On
Ian Baucom, Specters
of the Atlantic: Finance
Capital, Slavery, and
the Philosophy of History." [date
of access]. Romantic
Circles Reviews 10.1
(2008): 16 pars. Apr.
2008. <http://www.rc.umd.edu/reviews/rispoli_etal_sp08.html>.
Table
of Contents
Acknowledgments
Part One: "Now Being": Slavery, Speculation, and the Measure
of Our Time
1. Liverpool, a Capital of the Long Twentieth Century
2. "Subject$"; or, the "Type" of the Modern
3. "Madam Death! Madam Death!": Credit, Insurance, and
the Atlantic Cycle of Capital Accumulation
4. "Signum Rememorativum, Demonstrativum, Prognostikon":
Modernity and the Truth Event
5. "Please decide": The Singular and the Speculative
Part Two: Specters of the Atlantic: Slavery and the Witness
6. Frontispiece: Testimony, Rights, and the State of Exception
7. The View from the Window: Sympathy, Melancholy, and the Problem
of "Humanity"
8. The Fact of History: On Cosmopolitan Interestedness
9. The Imaginary Resentment of the Dead: A Theory of Melancholy Sentiment
10. "To Tumble into It, and Grasp for Breath as We Go Down":
The Idea of Suffering and the Case for Liberal Cosmopolitanism
11. This/Such, for Instance: The Witness against "History"
Part Three: "The Sea is History"
12. "The Sea is History": On Temporal Accumulation
Notes
Index
Reviewed by
S. Adair Rispoli
Greg Pierrot, Shawna Ross, David Jefferson, Dustin Kennedy, Laura Collins,
Tyler Hollet, Esther Deutsch, Paul Johnston, Brian Neff
Pennsylvania State University
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Ian Baucom's stimulating and rigorous Specters of the Atlantic:
Finance Capital, Slavery, and the Philosophy of History provides
a philosophically sophisticated account of the role of slavery within
the development of Western capitalism. Borrowing from Walter Benjamin's
angel of history and Giovanni Arrighi's The Long Twentieth Century:
Money, Power, and the Origin of Our Times (Verso, 1994), Baucom
advances the notion that "now" is never simply the present
but rather an accumulation of history, which also moves through alternating
cycles of economic development. Slavery, then, is no issue of the
past, but one with the most salient consequences in the present, not
only because the past has gathered itself within the present, but
also because, according to Baucom, our era of high finance capitalism
is comparable to that which arose out of the consolidation of the
slave trade in the eighteenth century. Through a minutely detailed
analysis of the 1781 Zong incident—in which one hundred
and thirty-three slaves were thrown overboard in order to collect
insurance—he shows how slaves as physical merchandise became
at that historical moment the equivalent of finance capital: a potential,
abstract and impersonal medium of exchange.
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Though centered on the Zong incident, Baucom's argument locates
this shift not only in the status of slaves, but also in Western epistemology
more generally. The slave trade required new ways of thinking about
the economy and the people who ran it. European thought shifted to
a credit-based system, a process that combined rational calculations
and imaginative speculation in order to judge character, know types,
and trust abstractions. Meanwhile, private society and its literature
also became a speculative affair, where one had to learn how to trust
the unknown. To supplement his argument about this literary turn,
Baucom frequently turns to Catherine Gallagher's Nobody's Story:
The Vanishing Acts of Women Writers in the Marketplace 1670-1820
(University of California Press, 1994) and to Deirdre Lynch's The
Economy of Character: Novels, Market Culture, and the Business of
Inner Meaning (University of Chicago Press, 1998), both of
which help explain the connection between credit and the task of the
novel to "teach" people how to interact with new types.
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Despite his astonishing range of reference—from Jameson to Zizek,
from Benjamin to Derrida, from Pocock to Lynch—what Baucom perhaps
misses is not the theoretical side of the argument, which he explains
with depth, clarity, and sophistication, but instead its material conditions
and exceptions to his brilliant rules. Where, for instance, is resistance?
Where are the voices of the slaves themselves? His imaginative reconstruction
of the Zong event effectively re-silences the slaves, burying
their bodies a second time in the Atlantic. Naturally, the already broad
range of his book perhaps makes these issues appear peripheral or irrelevant,
yet his erasure of the slaves' voices and presences overstates his argument.
This review, therefore, examines the omissions in Spectres of the
Atlantic as well as demonstrates how Baucom's argument easily accommodates
such considerations.
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Baucom demonstrates cannily that the famous abolitionist lawyer Granville
Sharp structured the court cases for the Zong in a performative
fashion, using the pages of his indictment to reproduce the exact
number of slaves murdered. Sharp organized his document so that of
138 total pages, six were blank, leaving 132 printed pages, the number
of slaves killed. If we include the index, the number of pages is
133, or the total number of slaves thrown into the ocean. When Baucom
describes the total number of slaves sold (9,914) by the Zong's
owners, who died during the middle passage, he halts his discussion;
an asterisk impedes the reading. Baucom then continues: "Nine
thousand, nine hundred and fourteen of the human beings who were taken
aboard ships Gregson either owned or co-owned did not reach the Americas
alive. All of them, and none of them, typical human beings" (49).
Another asterisk follows as Baucom returns to his primary discussion.
This bathos positions Baucom on his own reiterative chain wherein
the human actors in the tale (including the slaves, Sharp, the ship
owners, etc.) become theoretical, textual constructs, and philosophical
abstractions.
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For Baucom, Sharp's textual maneuver "imitates both the form
of the event it seeks not so much to describe as to surrogate and
the form of appearance of this event as a quasi-Benjaminian, quasi-Kantian,
quasi-Badiouvian truth event" (133). Similarly, Baucom formats
his own text so that his discussion of Sharp's "reiterative submission"
falls on pages 132 and 133 of Specters of the Atlantic. Baucom
is himself the author of a reiterative submission. But what exactly
does he reiterate? The dual layers of reiteration serve two functions.
First, Baucom's text enacts his theory of history's accumulative nature;
his text is a reformed and intensified repetition of Sharp's document.
Secondly, through Baucom, both the Zong massacre and Sharp's
document become quasi-truth events. Baucom's performance risks a potential
reenactment of finance capital's disembodiment of the victims of the
Zong massacre.
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"Why does Sharp," Baucom asks, "force his readers to
encounter and reencounter and reencounter this shock, this horror, this
violent impression on the mind?" (131). The obvious is stated:
Sharp employs a specific method in order to "reproduce the shock
of the event as an affect of reading, to cultivate in the minds of the
belated 'spectators of his event' not . . . a 'universal yet disinterested
sympathy for the players . . . '" but, rather, "'a universal
and interested sympathy'" (131). Baucom thereby imitates Sharp's
method for the readers of Specters of the Atlantic. Sharp forces
his readers to absorb the effects of each individual jettisoned over
the side of the Zong; Baucom fragments his text in similar fashion
to achieve similar effects. Baucom's use of Sharp's methodology saves
him from being an author who becomes lost in theoretical babble, which
would fail to establish Sharp's "universal and interested sympathy":
this is theory with a facelift. In other words, Baucom's book departs
from a purely theoretical approach, and instead novelizes its performances.
By doing so, Specters of the Atlantic becomes a kind of novel
whose discourse enters a "theoretical realism" to produce
a type of Zong slave/situation (43) for twenty-first-century
readers.
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Blurring the lines between archival research and his
own performance in redacting the Zong through his fragmented
approach, Baucom moves between poetry, history, and literature. Chapter
epigraphs taken from Trinidad-and-Tobago-born M. NourbeSe Philip's
poetry collection Zong! echo his text to move the reader. For
example, Chapter Six, "Frontispiece," begins with this:

By including Philip's work as epigraph, Baucom wants to call attention
to the words on the page and their placement. Each epigraph shapes
his text in some manner. The presence of wordless spaces impacts the
readers by disconnecting them from an education that has taught normative
reading skills: from left to right. This disconnect encourages readers
to assess their own relationship to both poet and author, while bearing
full responsibility for their readings.
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As a result, the Zong massacre and Sharp's document and even
Baucom's book become quasi-truth events. Capitalism's marginalized people
(e.g., slaves, low wage-labours, freed slaves, etc.) were made
into instruments of production in a frightening way, which capitalism
made look almost natural. Baucom finds a source for this naturalization
in the formal attributes of European literature, specifically the novel.
Historical causality thus becomes a matter of form itself, as form becomes
an historical actor and actually makes things happen because it makes
certain forms of capitalism epistemologically imaginable. Nodding to
Jameson's Marxism and Form (Princeton University Press, 1972),
Baucom avoids a crude base-superstructure model of analysis, yet he
uncharacteristically neglects outlining particularly one end of this
relationship—what he refers to as the "novelistic imagination."
What seems missing to us is neither economic analysis nor intellectual
history but rather attention to the nature of "theoretical realism"
in literature.
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The realist novel accepts many imperfect substitutions—characters
for people, descriptions for objects, etc.—yet if the novel does
"teach" its readers how to act in new socioeconomic realms,
the real suspension of belief occurs through neutralizing or neglecting
the non-equivalence of exchange (in Zizek's terminology). In other words,
readers learn socioeconomic lessons (i.e., how to identify and
deal with new "types") not through content but through form.
More particularly, they learn faith in the credit system that creates
these new "types" in the first place. The belief that the
novel can teach lessons through representation is itself a form of credit—a
willful decision to believe, say, the narrator of a triple-decker novel.
A strange reversal of agency is effected here, however, as there is
a difference between what happens with credit and what happens with
the novel: in the financial world, responsibility is dispersed among
shareholders and underwriters, but in a novel's world, responsibility
is typically focused and concentrated on one specific though unseen
narrator, a metaphoric attempt to return to a time when one could identify
someone actually responsible for one's financial stability (the father,
the banker, the landlord).
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As the realist novel teaches its readers specific socioeconomic lessons,
it also scripts and circulates a particular way of understanding history.
In the novel's conventional form, the narrator is the source of all
discourse—from their singular points of view, characters are defined,
and a story is told in a way that implies a linear chronology of events
with definite beginnings and ends. In this classic European form, one
voice has the authority to reconstruct historical events. These events
exist in a concrete and unalterable reality—reality as the narrator
knows and writes it. In Specters of the Atlantic, Baucom recreates
an understanding of history in the European literary tradition. He offers
a version of the Zong story. But he does not attempt to recover
counter-narratives. His voice usurps all others. Voices belonging to
the bodies thrown off the Zong remain mute—as perhaps they must—but
must all the voices of all slaves? If Specters of the Atlantic
is literature, then this puts Baucom in a hard place. He is attempting
to do history in a novelistic form, and, interestingly enough, his attempt
to displace the reader to render a more effective absorption of the
Zong incident requires us to fill in with heart where Baucom
cannot put it in himself.
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Baucom's book largely argues that finance capital was a major impetus
behind modernity and, by extension, behind the development of slavery.
Using the example of twenty-first-century international corporations
such as Nike—although he does not say it in so many words—Baucom
claims that we are still in many ways within the system that could insure
humans as commercial goods. Yet while Specters of the Atlantic
shows how insurance and finance capital shed a new light on the philosophy
of history and the "reading" of modernity in relation to slavery,
it makes no mention of the court case brought against the Aetna Insurance
Company, among other companies, in 2002. That year, Attorney Deadria
Farmer-Paellmann initiated a reparations law suit against Aetna Insurance
for making incredible profits on slavery in its earlier, eighteenth-century
incarnation. Aetna originally apologized to the African American community
and made vague promises about pursuing initiatives to eliminate disparities
in health care and in health status. Nothing happened, of course. Moral
behavior also has a market value: Aetna paid lip-service to the "human
interest" side of the issue because it looked like it might threaten
their financial interests. In the process, they showed themselves as
detached from the human side of the trade in Zong slaves as their
forebears were. This Baucom sees clearly: it is all a matter of
capital. Yet by focusing on financiers, he himself loses sight of the
people whom he means to vindicate, the Zong slaves. We cannot
bring them back, goes the time-old argument, and of course, that much
is true, but only because they never left. They are not specters so
as much as anonymous figures denied agency entered in the accounting
books of finance capital. Baucom is keenly aware of this process, exposes
it and yet fails to extend his own writing practice beyond it. By refusing
to see beyond the accounting book, Baucom condemns the Zong slaves
to remain forever ghosts.
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Why does Baucom not construe all bodies (owners, slaves, wage-workers)
as subject to the rule of finance capital, extending its perversion
beyond the White/Black dichotomy? By using his sense of the financial
revolution as the prime mover of trans-Atlantic culture to cross-contaminate
ethnic absolutism, we could locate similar collisions in contemporary
accounts of slave society. John Stedman's 1796 Narrative of a Five
Years' Expedition Against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam, in Guiana,
on the Wild Coast of South America, from the year 1772 to 1777 advances
Baucom's argument beyond the silent Zong slaves. Stedman (1744-1797),
a half-Scots, half-Dutch ship captian driven by curiosity to enlist
himself in a military party embarking to Surinam to quell a slave insurrection,
kept a journal during his expedition. Stedman's narrative enacts a symbiotic,
pathological relationship between meandering trans-Atlantic identities
through its transvaluations of Black/White spheres. Stedman comes to
represent the nexus of Black/White ethnic spheres as a source of hybridity
rather than antagonism. It is precisely the effects of cross-contamination
that show these two seemingly antagonistic spheres have multiple punctures
that permit them to bleed together. In fact, the cross-contamination
of White and Black can even occur via finance capital.
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Stedman, for instance, secures a loan to purchase manumission for
his mulatto lover, Joanna. She locates her agency within the terms of
finance capital by voicing her stubborn desire to stay in Surinam until
every farthing for the loan has been paid in full, despite Stedman's
pleas to do otherwise. Instead of reading the refusal to leave before
the loan is paid off as a self-deprecating response, she responds as
an effect of capitalism that has intertwined debts with the market value
of morality. Joanna's agency defies the silence of slaves in Baucom's
work. Granted, her response may not capture the same revolutionary drive
for freedom as her contemporaries, the Maroons, but both of these slave
agencies are responding to the same conditions of capital Baucom reads
purely.
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Slaves and displaced people are, in fact, radicals who often turned
against the force of finance capital. The financial revolution provided
the occasion for an eclectic underground culture to develop, offering
rich material for any attempt to recover a counter-history. Only once
does Baucom acknowledge Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker's The
Many-Headed Hydra: Sailors, Slaves, Commoners, and the Hidden History
of the Revolutionary Atlantic (Verso, 2000), when this text ought
to be a primary source of material for Baucom's counter-history. The
Many-Headed Hydra encapsulates a motley array of voices antithetical
to the beneficiaries of capitalism. This text demonstrates richly what
Specters of the Atlantic might have realized, but Baucom refrains
from recognizing what Linebaugh and Rediker already knew: in the "history
of modern Atlantic revolutionary movements" there
is chatter everywhere (Baucom 227). And it undermines Baucom's silencing of the
Zong slaves. Neither text can recover a whole counter-history
on its own, but through a concerted approach both texts can help modernity
better discern meaning within the chatter.
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Global capitalism has since left slavery behind, but its effects
on the bottom-most position of coerced labor are still with us. Ultimately,
Specters of the Atlantic underestimates that:
It takes human capital to fuel the capital machine
It takes human capital to man the arms of war
It takes human capital to build the ships
It takes human capital to sail the ships
It takes human capital to claim the land
It takes human capital to clear the forests
It takes human capital to spread humanity
It
takes human capital
to produce human capital.
The way Baucom elides issues of class is perhaps most obvious in the
use he makes of the very symbolic building, the Liverpool Exchange.
Built in 1754, the Exchange was also the city's town hall and became
the crowning achievement of a series of constructions throughout the
city, the symbol of Liverpool's "novel" wealth. Describing
the friezes on the building's façade, Baucom isolates representations
of "what had generated the vast amounts of money circulating through
Liverpool and accumulating within it: a set of African heads, circling
the Exchange" (52). Later, he mentions a 1784 masquerade ball on
the same premises in which "the principal families of the city
would have found themselves performing . . . their moment, their city,
and their city's shared sovereignty over its moment" (79).
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There is much insight in Baucom's reading, but it ignores a few signs
on that façade: in one of Baucom's sources—Richard Brooke's
Liverpool as It Was During the Last Quarter of the Eighteenth Century,
1775 to 1800 (London: J. Mawdsley & Son, 1853)—we learn
that "[m]ore than one of the marks of the cannon balls fired at
the Exchange [were] even yet visible" in 1853 (342). Between 1754
and 1784, the Exchange was damaged in at least two massive riots. During
the sailors' riot of 1775, "one of the most extraordinary and dangerous
riots that occurred in England [in the eighteenth century]" (qtd.
in Brooke 74), a mob attacked the Exchange with guns and cannons, bombarding
the building. This riot had started over wage disputes between slave
traders and sailors working on their ships; after attacking several
"Guineamen" in the harbor, the sailors ransacked houses belonging
to slave merchants, "threaten[ing] hostile visits to all the merchants
engaged in the Guinea trade" (342); they eventually met them with
demands at the Exchange, where the merchants were barricaded and defended
by a militia. Thus, the masquerade ball can be seen in a different light
when we realize that the Exchange was as much a fortification for finance
capital as it was a monument to its glory. Therein lies the strength
and the weakness of Baucom's work: his study concentrates on the elites,
and in the same movement ignores the masses; it focuses on finance capital
but bypasses the labor that produces it. Baucom's Specters of the
Atlantic, for being thought-provoking and thorough-going as it is,
addresses one side only of the Guinea coin.
Publisher's
Information
Review published: 20 April 2008.
Romantic
Circles - Reviews -
Ian Baucom, Specters
of the Atlantic
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