“No-Body’s Watch”: Nineteenth-Century Capitalism, Temporality, and the Figure of the Loafer

Authors

  • Karin Hoepker

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18422/71-06

Abstract

This article outlines the rather obscure ascent and fall of the loafer as a cultural figure. Beginning with the emergence of the term and its ambivalent semantics of idleness, I will sketch its subsequent racialization and regionalization, as it was appropriated by abolitionist writers who associated with whiteness, poverty, and southern masculinity. The significance of the term lies in the way it combines criticisms of capitalism and racism in a figure of idleness. A figure of idleness, both in its romanticized and disparaging connotations, the loafer alerts us to the fact that US nineteenth-century temporality is closely and inseparably entangled in the history of capitalism and slavery.

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Published

2021-09-29

How to Cite

Hoepker, K. “‘No-Body’s Watch’: Nineteenth-Century Capitalism, Temporality, and the Figure of the Loafer”. New American Studies Journal: A Forum, vol. 71, Sept. 2021, https://doi.org/10.18422/71-06.