The Fugitive's Properties Law and the Poetics of Possession
by Stephen M. Best
University of Chicago Press, 2004
Cloth: 978-0-226-04433-0 | Paper: 978-0-226-04434-7 | Electronic: 978-0-226-24111-1
DOI: 10.7208/chicago/9780226241111.001.0001
ABOUT THIS BOOKAUTHOR BIOGRAPHYTABLE OF CONTENTS

ABOUT THIS BOOK

In this study of literature and law before and since the Civil War, Stephen M. Best shows how American conceptions of slavery, property, and the idea of the fugitive were profoundly interconnected. The Fugitive's Properties uncovers a poetics of intangible, personified property emerging out of antebellum laws, circulating through key nineteenth-century works of literature, and informing cultural forms such as blackface minstrelsy and early race films.

Best also argues that legal principles dealing with fugitives and indebted persons provided a sophisticated precursor to intellectual property law as it dealt with rights in appearance, expression, and other abstract aspects of personhood. In this conception of property as fleeting, indeed fugitive, American law preserved for much of the rest of the century slavery's most pressing legal imperative: the production of personhood as a market commodity. By revealing the paradoxes of this relationship between fugitive slave law and intellectual property law, Best helps us to understand how race achieved much of its force in the American cultural imagination. A work of ambitious scope and compelling cross-connections, The Fugitive's Properties sets new agendas for scholars of American literature and legal culture.

AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY

Stephen M. Best is an associate professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

List of Illustrations

Debts

Introduction: The Slave's Two Bodies

Fugitive Property

The Agency of Form

Caveat Emptor: Chapter One: Fugitive Sound: Fungible Personhood, Evanescent Property

Theft and Gift

Copyright Law

The Human Phonograph

The Poetics of Property, 1857: Dred Scott v. Sandford

Impersonation

Pro Bono Publico: Chapter Two: The Fugitive's Properties: Uncle Tom's Incalculable Dividend

Fictions of Finance: Puttin’ on Old Massa

Pro Bono Publico

Tom’s par me la

Castles in the Air

The Social Covenant of Property

Cuttin’ of Figgers

Sine Qua Non: Chapter Three: Counterfactuals, Causation, and the Tenses of "Separate but Equal"

In Plain Black and White

Parallel Tracks

What Happened in the Tunnel

Sin and Risk

Principle and History

Procedure and Pragmatism

Notes

Index