Orlando Patterson, property, and ancient slavery: the definitional question revisited

This essay provides a critique of Orlando Patterson's analysis of property and slavery. Traditionally, the notion that the slave was the property of his or her owner was seen as the distinguishing characteristic of slavery. Patterson criticised this approach on several counts, replacing the tra...

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Main Author: Lewis, David
Other Authors: Bodel, John
Format: Book Section
Published: Wiley-Blackwell 2016
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/45524/
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author Lewis, David
author2 Bodel, John
author_facet Bodel, John
Lewis, David
author_sort Lewis, David
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This essay provides a critique of Orlando Patterson's analysis of property and slavery. Traditionally, the notion that the slave was the property of his or her owner was seen as the distinguishing characteristic of slavery. Patterson criticised this approach on several counts, replacing the traditional formulation of slavery as the ownership of human beings with his own sociological definition, which holds that the condition should be defined as 'the permanent, violent domination of natally alienated and generally dishonoured persons.' First, it is shown that the concept of property attacked by Patterson has little in common with the concept of property as understood in jurisprudence and comparative law, meaning that none of Patterson's objections carry any weight. Two ancient case studies - classical Athens and Achaemenid Babylonia - show that the approach of modern comparative law maps accurately on to the legal contours of slave ownership in these two very different societies. Finally, the paper highlights several shortcomings of Patterson's reformulated definition.
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spelling nottingham-455242020-05-04T18:24:35Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/45524/ Orlando Patterson, property, and ancient slavery: the definitional question revisited Lewis, David This essay provides a critique of Orlando Patterson's analysis of property and slavery. Traditionally, the notion that the slave was the property of his or her owner was seen as the distinguishing characteristic of slavery. Patterson criticised this approach on several counts, replacing the traditional formulation of slavery as the ownership of human beings with his own sociological definition, which holds that the condition should be defined as 'the permanent, violent domination of natally alienated and generally dishonoured persons.' First, it is shown that the concept of property attacked by Patterson has little in common with the concept of property as understood in jurisprudence and comparative law, meaning that none of Patterson's objections carry any weight. Two ancient case studies - classical Athens and Achaemenid Babylonia - show that the approach of modern comparative law maps accurately on to the legal contours of slave ownership in these two very different societies. Finally, the paper highlights several shortcomings of Patterson's reformulated definition. Wiley-Blackwell Bodel, John Scheidel, Walter 2016-12-23 Book Section PeerReviewed Lewis, David (2016) Orlando Patterson, property, and ancient slavery: the definitional question revisited. In: On human bondage: after slavery and social death. The ancient world: comparative histories . Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 31-54. ISBN 9781119162483 Orlando Patterson; Slavery; Property; Ancient Greece; Babylonia http://eu.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1119162483.html
spellingShingle Orlando Patterson; Slavery; Property; Ancient Greece; Babylonia
Lewis, David
Orlando Patterson, property, and ancient slavery: the definitional question revisited
title Orlando Patterson, property, and ancient slavery: the definitional question revisited
title_full Orlando Patterson, property, and ancient slavery: the definitional question revisited
title_fullStr Orlando Patterson, property, and ancient slavery: the definitional question revisited
title_full_unstemmed Orlando Patterson, property, and ancient slavery: the definitional question revisited
title_short Orlando Patterson, property, and ancient slavery: the definitional question revisited
title_sort orlando patterson, property, and ancient slavery: the definitional question revisited
topic Orlando Patterson; Slavery; Property; Ancient Greece; Babylonia
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/45524/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/45524/