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4 - ‘Complexions of Every Varied Hue’

Racial Beliefs, Biopower, and Acclimatisation

from Part II - The Nation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2022

Sara Caputo
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

Chapter 4 discusses various cultural constructions of physical difference: racialised phenotype, supposed medical predisposition or resistance to specific diseases and climes, and concepts of filthiness and hygiene. The eighteenth-century Navy was embedded into the structural racism of the Atlantic world and British empire, and many seamen suffered from this. Yet, unlike other institutions, it still rarely used ‘race’ as a systematic label to recruit, classify, or sift its workforce. Seamen were occasionally deployed according to climatic theories of national character and racialised constructions of disease and immunity. However, many naval surgeons still saw immunity as acquired rather than innate, and thus modifiable and dependent on a man’s most recent deployment, rather than intrinsic to ‘race’. Similarly, prejudice surrounding the cleanliness and attitudes of some groups of ‘foreigners’ was linked more to the administrative structures of foreign countries and navies than to essentialist understandings of the individuals themselves. Therefore, in the eyes of many officers, virtually any able man could be absorbed, reformed, and put to use by British naval discipline. This did not mitigate the violence and discrimination of everyday racism, but it highlights the somewhat levelling attitude of an administration bent on maximising its efficient exploitation of manpower.

Type
Chapter
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Foreign Jack Tars
The British Navy and Transnational Seafarers during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
, pp. 117 - 142
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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