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On Lingering and Being Last
Race and Sovereignty in the New World
Jonathan Elmer
$24.00
ISBN: 9780823229413 Book (Paperback) Fordham University Press 256 pages 4 black and white illustrations October 2008
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“Smart, topical, well-researched, and highly original.” —Leonard Tennenhouse, Brown University What are we talking about when we talk about sovereignty? Is it about formal legitimacy or
practical authority? Does it require the ability to control the flow of people or goods across a
border; is it primarily a principle of international recognition; or does its essence lie in the
power to regulate the lives of a state’s citizens? Political theorists, historians, scholars of
international relations, lawyers, anthropologists, literary critics—all approach the dilemmas of
sovereign power with a mixture of urgency and frustration.
In On Lingering and Being Last, Jonathan Elmer argues that the logic of sovereignty that
emerged in early modern Europe and that limits our thinking today must be understood as a
fundamentally racialized logic, first visible in the New World. The modern concept of sovereignty
is based on a trope of personification, the conjunction of individual and collective identities. In
Grotius, Hobbes, and others, a fiction of sovereign autonomy enabled states to be personified as
individuals, as bodies politic, even as individual humans could be imagined as miniature states.
The contradictions of this logic were fully revealed only in the New World, as writers ranging
from Aphra Behn to Thomas Jefferson and Herman Melville demonstrate.
The racialized sovereign figures examined in On Lingering and Being Last—the slave king
Oroonoko, the last chief Logan, and their avatars—are always at once a person and a people.
They embody the connection between the individual and the collectivity, and thereby reveal
that the volatile work of sovereign personification takes place in a new world constituted both
by concepts of equality, homogeneity, and symmetry—by an ideal of liberal individualism—
and by the realities of racial domination and ideology in the era of colonial expansion. The
conjunction of the individual, race, and New World territorialization, Elmer argues, is key to
understanding the deepest strata in the political imagination of Atlantic modernity.
| JONATHAN ELMER is Associate Professor of English at Indiana University. He is the author of
Reading at the Social Limit: Affect, Mass Culture, and Edgar Allan Poe. |
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