Lit Med. 2020;38(1):51-87. doi: 10.1353/lm.2020.0003.
This article considers the cultural meanings of Civil War injury, particularly amputation, with regard to race. Putting elements of print and visual culture in conversation with the material history of prostheses, the article explores competing understandings of war-acquired disability as a unifying category that could cross the color line or, alternatively, as a site of (white) racial distinction. While a number of depictions of "Empty Sleeves" in the Northern press in the early years following the war depicted black veterans' battle injuries as proof of their fitness for citizenship, representations of prosthetic limbs tended to tie rehabilitation to whiteness and to exclude blackness from the imagined national future. Exploring representations of Civil War injury and prosthetic reconstruction thus nuances accounts of the intersection of disability and race in the nineteenth century, revealing a form of disability inclusion that produced new elements of subjection and exclusion.
本文考虑了内战伤害(尤其是截肢)的文化意义,特别是与种族有关的问题。本文将印刷和视觉文化元素与假肢的物质历史进行对话,探讨了对战后残疾这一概念的不同理解,这种理解认为它是一个可以跨越肤色界限的统一类别,或者是一个(白人)种族区分的场所。虽然战后初期北方媒体有一些关于“空袖子”的描述,将黑人退伍军人的战斗伤描绘为他们适合公民身份的证明,但假肢的描述往往将康复与白人联系在一起,将黑人排除在想象中的国家未来之外。因此,探索内战伤害和假肢重建的表现形式,细微地说明了 19 世纪残疾和种族交叉的情况,揭示了一种残疾包容形式,产生了新的从属和排斥因素。