Indentured Servants

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Power, being inherently unequal, brings about the issues of dominance and oppression. In order for any variation of an institution of power to exist, there must be someone made powerless. In the Caribbean, colonialism and capitalism created the platform on which this unequal distribution of power was built. During the nineteenth century, indentured servants were brought from Asia to the Caribbean to supplement the labor force after the emancipation of the slaves. Indentured servants were contracted by a firm to work for a given amount of time in exchange for passage to their destination and a small wage. Contracts usually lasted anywhere from three to ten years. The dynamics of Caribbean society were forced to shift as indentured servants were …show more content…

In Verene A. Shepherd’s “Indian Women and Labour Migration”, Lisa Yun’s “The Depositions”, and Patricia Powell’s The Pagoda, the issues of power and how it is intertwined in the lives of the indentured and non-indentured people of the Caribbean are addressed. Colonization of the Caribbean by European imperialists created the foundation on which the trade of indentured servants began. The terrible treatment of the slaves continued onto the indentured servants. The voyage from the native lands of the Asian immigrants were marked with disease and death. Hundreds of thousands of “coolies”, or indentured servants, from India and China were forced to make the same treacherous journey that the slaves had made only years before. Due to lies, trickery, and necessity these people left their homes in the hopes of having a better life in the Caribbean, but, in reality, they were only playing into the Euro-colonial trap of capitalism. These laborers were necessary to keep the plantation system running and to be capital themselves as they were shipped and bought like goods. Learning from the treatment of African slaves, the governments of European countries attempted to make the voyages from India …show more content…

Retaining the opinions of the colonizers and capitalists created tension between the two lower classes. Indentured and non-indentured Asians were both met with animosity from Afro-Caribbean populations. As Powell explains through her protagonist Lowe, “They [Asian indentured servants and immigrants] had been brought there only to supply cheap labor and keep down wages. They had been brought there only to keep the Negro population in check” (45). This competition economically and socially results from the Euro-colonial concept of white supremacy and the continued value of capitalism—in this case capitalism valued over human lives. Additionally, Yun speaks to the violent acrimony that resulted from the situation Powell described. Recalling the dismal practices of humiliating indentured servants on plantations, Yun writes, “Every Chinese who was locked up was forced by the manager to bark like dogs and bleat like sheep. If we refused to do so, we would be beaten severely. They humiliated us in every possible way. Sometimes I do not even have clothes to wear” (143). Reducing Asian indentured servants to the subhuman level of domesticated animals not only serves to humiliate them, but also strip them of their morale and dignity. The managers mentioned by Yun would usually be freed slaves. The

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