Longreads + Open Thread

Skyscrapers, AI, Congestion Pricing, The Odyssey, History, Markets, Accounting, Loneliness, Slavery

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Longreads

Books

Slavery and Social Death: if you're ever feeling excessively optimistic about the human condition, this book serves as a good reminder of the ways people treated one another in the distant past, and how recently such things have persisted. This book is a study of the nature of slavery, more as a social than an economic relationship.

Which is good, because asking about it as an economic relationship leads to all sorts of awkward questions. (It's no coincidence that if you go far enough to the left, you'll hear people claim that needing to earn a paycheck is a form of slavery, and if you move to the right, the idea that you or your boss would pay taxes is, you guessed it, slavery!) There's a continuum between being your own boss, having a boss, being an indentured servant with a finite term, and living in a society structured around forcing you to work for one person, in whatever capacity they want, until one of you dies. Somewhere on that continuum, it switches to being unacceptable no matter what. (There have been societies where most slaves sold themselves into that status, like Korea, which at its peak had a similar share of the population enslaved as the US South on the eve of the Civil War.)

The book makes the case that the best way to understand slavery is that it's the social equivalent of death: slaves are people stripped of any connection to ancestry, nuclear family, personal possessions, safety, and dignity. They may have access to some of these, but it's entirely contingent: it's common for them to be renamed, even if they're from the same culture as the people who enslaved them, but they won't forget their real names. They can have kids, but they can never be sure they won't be separated from them. They can have a plot of land on which they grow food, or tools that they use to work—it is, in fact, quite common across slave-holding societies for the most successful slaves to have slaves of their own. But they know that all of this can be taken away.

All of this leads to some fascinating social arrangements that try to make the fact of slavery coexist with some kind of legal and moral framework that makes it acceptable. There are cultures where mistreated slaves will go to the home of someone of a similar social station to their owner, and start breaking furniture, after which their master needs to apologize, make financial amends, and be publicly embarrassed by all the fuss. Various legal systems have tried to work through the concept of someone who isn't allowed to own anything somehow saving up enough money to buy their own freedom—was it their money in the first place?

What this book leaves you with is another uncomfortable set of abstract questions: obviously most modern people react to the idea of slavery with some level of revulsion, but that's a response that would have struck most historical people as nonsensical. And the idea of inflicting some level of social death on someone—denying them some form of family, connection to ancestry, or even the right to own things—is something societies inevitably do by some definition, because there isn't a broad model that encompasses everyone's different definitions of these, and also because ejecting people from society is an incredibly tempting move, at many contexts and at many scales. Which is in one sense a necessity; every society has to decide who’s capable of full participation, who isn’t, and who’s outside of their orbit entirely. But there are better and worse ways to do this.

Open Thread

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