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Slave narrative

The slave narrative is a type of literary genre involving the (written) autobiographical accounts of enslaved Africans, particularly in the Americas. Over six thousand such narratives are estimated to exist;[1] about 150 narratives were published as separate books or pamphlets. In the United States during the Great Depression (1930s), more than 2,300 additional oral histories on life during slavery were collected by writers sponsored and published by the Works Progress Administration,[2] a New Deal program. Most of the 26 audio-recorded interviews are held by the Library of Congress.[3]

Some of the earliest memoirs of captivity known in the English-speaking world were written by white Europeans and later Americans, captured and sometimes enslaved in North Africa by local Muslims, usually Barbary pirates. These were part of a broad category of "captivity narratives". Beginning in the 17th century, these included accounts by colonists and later American settlers in North America and the United States who were captured and held by Native Americans. Several well-known captivity narratives were published before the American Revolution, and they often followed forms established with the narratives of captivity in North Africa.[citation needed] North African accounts did not continue to compile after the Napoleonic Era; accounts from North Americans, captured by western tribes migrating west continued until the end of the 19th century.

Given the problem of international contemporary slavery in the 20th and 21st centuries, additional slave narratives are being written and published.

As a literary genre

The development of slave narratives from autobiographical accounts to modern fictional works led to the establishment of slave narratives as a literary genre. This large rubric of this so-called "captivity literature" includes more generally "any account of the life, or a major portion of the life, of a fugitive or former slave, either written or orally related by the slave himself or herself".[4] Whereas the first narratives told the stories of fugitive or freed slaves in a time of racial prejudice, they further developed into retrospective fictional novels and extended their influence until common days. Not only maintaining the memory and capturing the historical truth transmitted in these accounts, but slave narratives were primarily the tool for fugitive or former slaves to state their independence in the 19th century, and carry on and conserve authentic and true historical facts from a first-person perspective. They go further than just autobiographies, and are moreover "a source for reconstructing historical experience".[5] The freed slaves that wrote the narratives are considered as historians, since "memory and history come together".[6] These accounts link elements of the slave's personal life and destiny with key historical phenomena, such as the American Civil War and the Underground Railroad.

In simple, yet powerful storylines, slave narratives follow in general a plot common to all of them: starting from the initial situation, the slave in his master's home, the protagonist escapes in the wilderness and narrates the struggle for survival and recognition throughout his uncertain journey to freedom.[7] After all, these narratives were written retrospectively by freed slaves and/or their abolitionist advocate, hence the focus on the transformation from the dehumanized slave to the self-emancipated free man. This change often entailed literacy as a means to overcome captivity, as the case of Frederick Douglass highlights. The narratives are very graphic to the extent as extensive accounts of e.g. whipping, abuse and rape of enslaved women are exposed in detail (see Treatment of slaves in the United States). The denunciation of the slave owners, in particular their cruelty and hypocrisy, is a recurring theme in slave narratives, and in some examples took a comic stance denouncing the double standards (e.g. in Douglass's narrative, his slave owner Hopkins is a very religious, but also brutal man).

According to James Olney, a typical outline looks the following way:

A. An engraved portrait, signed by the narrator.

B. A title page that includes the claim, as an integral part of the title, "Written by Himself" (or some close variant: "Written from a statement of Facts Made by Himself"; or "Written by a Friend, as Related to Him by Brother Jones"; etc.)

C. A handful of testimonials and/or one or more prefaces or introductions written either by a white abolitionist friend of the narrator (William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips) or by a white amanuensis/editor/author actually responsible for the text (John Greenleaf Whittier, David Wilson, Louis Alexis Chamerovzow), in the course of which preface the reader is told that the narrative is a "plain, unvarnished tale" and that naught "has been set down in malice, nothing exaggerated, nothing drawn from the imagination"—indeed, the tale, it is claimed, understates the horrors of slavery.

D. A poetic epigraph, by preference from William Cowper.

E. The actual narrative:

  1. a first sentence beginning, "I was born ... ," then specifying a place but not a date of birth;
  2. a sketchy account of parentage, often involving a white father;
  3. description of a cruel master, mistress, or overseer, details of first observed whipping and numerous subsequent whippings, with women very frequently the victims;
  4. an account of one extraordinarily strong, hardworking slave often "pure African"-who, because there is no reason for it, refuses to be whipped;
  5. record of the barriers raised against slave literacy and the overwhelming difficulties encountered in learning to read and write;
  6. description of a "Christian" slaveholder (often of one such dying in terror) and the accompanying claim that "Christian" slaveholders are invariably worse than those professing no religion;
  7. description of the amounts and kinds of food and clothing given to slaves, the work required of them, the pattern of a day, a week, a year;
  8. account of a slave auction, of families being separated and destroyed, of distraught mothers clinging to their children as they are torn from them, of slave coffles being driven South;
  9. description of patrols, of failed attempt(s) to escape, of pursuit by men and dogs;
  10. description of successful attempt(s) to escape, lying by during the day, travelling by night guided by the North Star, reception in a free state by Quakers who offer a lavish breakfast and much genial thee/thou conversation;
  11. taking of a new last name (frequently one suggested by a white abolitionist) to accord with new social identity as a free man, but retention of first name as a mark of continuity of individual identity;
  12. reflections on slavery.

F. An appendix or appendices composed of documentary material bills of sale, details of purchase from slavery, newspaper items-, further reflections on slavery, sermons, anti-slavery speeches, poems, appeals to the reader for funds and moral support in the battle against slavery.[1]

There is no consensus about what exact type of literature slave narratives are, whether they can be considered as a proper genre, comprised in the large category captivity narrative, or are autobiographies, memoirs, testimonials, or novels; nonetheless, they play a big part in keeping up the memory of slavery and in approaching a topic that was considered as a taboo for a long time – especially since many denied and still deny the existence of slavery.[8] Given the participation in the 19th century of abolitionist editors (at least in the United States), influential early 20th-century historians, such as Ulrich B. Phillips in 1929, suggested that, as a class, "their authenticity was doubtful". These doubts have been criticized following better academic research of these narratives, since the late 20th-century historians have more often validated the accounts of slaves about their own experiences.[9]

North American slave narratives

Slave narratives by African slaves from North America were first published in England in the 18th century. They soon became the main form of African-American literature in the 19th century. Slave narratives were publicized by abolitionists, who sometimes participated as editors, or writers if slaves were not literate. During the first half of the 19th century, the controversy over slavery in the United States led to impassioned literature on both sides of the issue.

To present the reality of slavery, a number of former slaves, such as Harriet Tubman, Harriet Jacobs, and Frederick Douglass, published accounts of their enslavement and their escapes to freedom. Lucy Delaney wrote an account that included the freedom suit waged by her mother in Missouri for their freedom. Eventually some 6,000 former slaves from North America and the Caribbean wrote accounts of their lives, and over 100 book-length accounts were published from formerly enslaved people worldwide.[10]

Before the American Civil War, some authors wrote fictional accounts of slavery to create support for abolitionism. The prime example is Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852) by Harriet Beecher Stowe. The success of her novel and the social tensions of the time brought a response by white Southern writers, such as William Gilmore Simms and Mary Eastman, who published what were called anti-Tom novels. Both kinds of novels were bestsellers in the 1850s.

Tales of religious redemption

From the 1770s to the 1820s, slave narratives generally gave an account of a spiritual journey leading to Christian redemption. The authors usually characterized themselves as Africans rather than slaves, as most were born in Africa.

Examples include:

  • Ukawsaw Gronniosaw, A Narrative of the Most Remarkable Particulars in the Life of James Albert "Ukawsaw Gronniosaw", an African Prince, Bath, England, 1772
  • Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, London, 1789
  • Venture Smith, A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Venture, a Native of Africa: But Resident Above Sixty Years in the United States of America, New London, 1798
  • Jeffrey Brace, The Blind African Slave, Or Memoirs of Boyrereau Brinch, Nicknamed Jeffrey Brace, as told to Benjamin F. Prentiss, Esq., St. Albans, Vermont, 1810;[11] edited and with an introduction by Kari J. Winter, Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 2004, ISBN 0-299-20140-6[12]
  • John Jea, The Life, History, and Unparalleled Sufferings of John Jea, the African Preacher, 1811
  • Greensbury Washington Offley, A Narrative of the Life and Labors of the Rev. G. W. Offley, a Colored Man, Local Preacher and Missionary, 1859

Some more recent narratives, such as Petro Kilekwa's Slave Boy to Priest: The Autobiography of Padre Petro Kilekwa (1937), followed a similar theme.

Tales to inspire the abolitionist movement

From the mid-1820s, writers consciously chose the autobiographical form to generate enthusiasms for the abolitionist movement. Some writers adopted literary techniques, including the use of fictionalized dialogue. Between 1835 and 1865 more than 80 such narratives were published. Recurrent features include: slave auctions, the break-up of families, and frequently two accounts of escapes, one of which is successful. As this was the period of the forced migration of an estimated one million slaves from the Upper South to the Deep South through the internal slave trade, the experiences of auctions and separation of families were common to many.

Examples include:

Tales of progress

 
Slave narrative of Thomas H. Jones published in 1871

Following the defeat of the slave states of the Confederate South, the authors had less need to convey the evils of slavery. Some gave a sentimental account of plantation life and ended with the narrator adjusting to the new life of freedom. The emphasis of writers shifted conceptually toward a recounting of individual and racial progress rather than securing freedom.

Examples include:

WPA slave narratives

During the Great Depression of the 1930s, the New Deal Works Projects Administration (WPA) employed writers and researchers from the Federal Writers' Project to interview and document the stories of African Americans who were former slaves. Most had been children when the Thirteenth Amendment was passed. Produced between 1936 and 1938, the narratives recount the experiences of more than 2,300 former slaves. Some interviews were recorded; 23 of 26 known audio recordings are held by the American Folklife Center of the Library of Congress.[3][14] The last interview of a former slave was with Fountain Hughes, then 101, in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1949.[3] He was a grandson of a slave owned by President Thomas Jefferson at Monticello.

North American slave narratives as travel literature

Slave narratives inherently involved travel and form a significant type of travel writing. As John Cox says in Traveling South, "travel was a necessary prelude to the publication of a narrative by a slave, for slavery could not be simultaneously experienced and written." Where many travel narratives are written by privileged travelers, slave narratives show people traveling despite significant legal barriers to their actions, and in this way are a distinct and essential element in how travel narratives formed the American character.[15]

North African slave narratives

In comparison to North American and Caribbean slave narratives, the North African slave narratives in English were written by British and American white slaves captured (often at sea or through Barbary pirates) and enslaved in North Africa in the 18th and early 19th centuries. These narratives have a distinct form in that they highlight the "otherness" of the Muslim slave traders, whereas the African-American slave narratives often call slave traders to account as fellow Christians.

Narratives focused on the central themes of freedom and liberty which drew inspiration from the American Revolution. Since the narratives include the recurrence of themes and events, quoting, and relying heavily upon each other it is believed by scholars that the main source of information was other narratives more so than real captivities.[16] Female captives were depicted as Gothic fiction characters clinging to the hope of freedom thus more relatable to the audience.[17]

Examples include:

  • Charles Sumner (1847). White Slavery in the Barbary States: A lecture before the Boston Mercantile Library Association, Feb. 17, 1847. ISBN 9781092289818.
  • A True and Faithful Account of the Religion and Manners of the Mahometans by Joseph Pitts (1663–1735) tells his capture as a boy age 14 or 15 by pirates while fishing off Newfoundland. His sale as a slave and his life under three different masters in North Africa, and his travels to Mecca are all described.
  • Tyrkja-Gudda, 1952 and 2001
  • Thomas Pellow, The History of the Long Captivity and Adventures of Thomas Pellow, In South Barbary, 1740
  • A Curious, Historical and Entertaining Narrative of the Captivity and almost unheard of Sufferings and Cruel treatment of Mr Robert White, 1790[18]
  • A Journal of the Captivity and Suffering of John Foss; Several Years a Prisoner in Algiers, 1798[19]
  • History of the Captivity and Sufferings of Mrs Maria Martin who was six years a slave in Algiers; two of which she was confined in a dismal dungeon, loaded with irons, by the command of an inhuman Turkish officer. Written by herself. To which is added, a concise history of Algiers, with the manners and customs of the people, 1812[20]
  • Captain James Riley, Sufferings in Africa, 1815
  • The Narrative of Robert Adams, An American Sailor who was wrecked on the West Coast of Africa in the year 1810; was detained Three Years in Slavery by the Arabs of the Great Desert, 1816
  • James Leander Cathcart, The Captives, Eleven Years a Prisoner in Algiers, published in 1899, many years after his captivity

Women's slave narratives

Narratives by enslaved women include the memoirs of Harriet Jacobs, Mary Prince, Mattie J. Jackson, and "old Elizabeth," among others.

In her narrative, Mary Prince, a Bermuda-born woman and slave discusses her deep connection with her master's wife and the pity she felt for the wife as she witnessed the "ill-treatment" the wife suffered at the hands of her husband.[21] Prince was taught to read by Moravian missionaries.[22] Literacy, however, was not a common theme for all enslaved women. The life story of "old Elizabeth" was transcribed from her oral account at the age of 97.[23]

Other historical slave narratives

As slavery has been practised all over the world for millennia, some narratives cover places and times other than these main two. One example is the account given by John R. Jewitt, an English armourer enslaved for years by Maquinna of the Nootka people in the Pacific Northwest. The Canadian Encyclopedia calls his memoir a "classic of captivity literature"[24] and it is a rich source of information about the indigenous people of Vancouver Island.

  • Narrative of the Adventures and Sufferings of John R. Jewitt, only survivor of the crew of the ship Boston, during a captivity of nearly three years among the savages of Nootka Sound: with an account of the manners, mode of living, and religious opinions of the natives. Middletown, Connecticut, printed by Loomis and Richards, 1815[25]

Maria ter Meetelen (1704 in Amsterdam – fl. 1751), was a Dutch writer of an autobiography. Her biography is considered to be a valuable witness statement of the life of a former slave (1748).

  • Maria ter Meetelen, The Curious and Amazing Adventures of Maria ter Meetelen; Twelve Years a Slave (1731- 43), Translated and Introduced by Caroline Stone. (Hardinge Simpole, 2010) [1].

Contemporary slave narratives

Nonfiction

A contemporary slave narrative is a recent memoir written by a former slave, or ghost-written on their behalf. Modern areas of the world in which slavery occurs include the Sudan. Escape from Slavery: The True Story of My Ten Years in Captivity – and My Journey to Freedom in America (2003) by Francis Bok and Edward Tivnan, and Slave by Mende Nazer and Damien Lewis, describe from slavery experiences in the Sudan.

"Another Slave Narrative", a film series, was launched by filmmaker Michelle Jackson on December 18, 2016.[26] Jackson, inspired by an interview with a former slave, decided to present the stories of previously enslaved people in a series of short films. A cast of 22 actors of mixed sex, race, and age, read out individual slaves' interviews from the Slave Narrative Collection which includes more than 2,300 interviews conducted from 1936–38. Jackson's aim is to document every single fate and hence approach the taboo of slavery, and keep the memory of the slaves alive through these videos.

Fictional

The Underground Railroad by National Book Award winner Colson Whitehead takes place in an alternative version of the 19th century. Cora, a slave on a cotton farm in Georgia escapes via the Underground Railroad.[27] The novel was well received. It was said to possess "the chilling, matter-of-fact power of the slave narratives collected by the Federal Writers' Project in the 1930s, with echoes of Toni Morrison's Beloved" and could be considered as a modern-tale fictional slave narrative.[28]

Neo-slave narratives

A neo-slave narrative — a term coined by Ishmael Reed while working on his 1976 novel Flight to Canada and used by him in a 1984 interview[29] — is a modern fictional work set in the slavery era by contemporary authors or substantially concerned with depicting the experience or the effects of enslavement in the New World.[30] The works are largely classified as novels, but may pertain to poetical works as well. The renaissance of the postmodern slave narratives in the 20th century was a means to deal retrospectively with slavery, and to give a fictional account of historical facts from the first-person perspective.[31]

Examples include:

See also

Literature

Authors of slave narratives

Other

References

  1. ^ a b Olney, James (1984). "'I Was Born': Slave Narratives, Their Status as Autobiography and as Literature". Callaloo. 20 (20): 46–73. doi:10.2307/2930678. JSTOR 2930678.
  2. ^ Greene, Bob (February 17, 2013). "America's 'Slave Narratives' should shock us". CNN.
  3. ^ a b c "Interview with Fountain Hughes, Baltimore, Maryland, June 11, 1949", American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, World Digital Library. Retrieved May 26, 2013.
  4. ^ Andrews, William. "How to Read a Slave Narrative".
  5. ^ . www.gilderlehrman.org. August 6, 2012. Archived from the original on March 17, 2017. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  6. ^ John, Ernest (January 1, 2014). The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative. Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN 9780199731480. OCLC 881290138.
  7. ^ Frances., Smith Foster (January 1, 1994). Witnessing slavery : the development of ante-bellum slave narratives. University of Wisconsin law school. ISBN 9780299142148. OCLC 800963917.
  8. ^ "Slavery Denial". slavenorth.com. Retrieved March 16, 2017.
  9. ^ Nichols, William W. (1971). "Slave Narratives: Dismissed Evidence in the Writing of Southern History". Phylon. 32 (4): 403–409. doi:10.2307/274066. JSTOR 274066.
  10. ^ Schmidt, Arnold (1997). "Narratives". In Rodriguez, Junius P. (ed.). The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery. ABC-CLIO. pp. 457–58. ISBN 9780874368857.
  11. ^ "Boyrereau Brinch and Benjamin F. Prentiss (Benjamin Franklin), 1774 or 5-1817", Documenting the South, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Retrieved March 4, 2013.
  12. ^ "Taken Aback in Vermont, Seven Days, July 6, 2005.
  13. ^ Susanna Ashton, "Slaves of Charleston", The Forward, September 19, 2014, pp. 13 and 16.
  14. ^ Library of Congress Project: WPA. Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery in the United States from Interviews with Former Slaves: Volume II, Arkansas Narratives, Part 3. Washington, DC: Library of Congress, 1941. Retrieved December 31, 2010.
  15. ^ Cox, John D. (2005). Traveling South: Travel Narratives and the Construction of American Identity. University of Georgia Press. pp. 64–66. ISBN 9780820330860.
  16. ^ Papadopoulou, Nikoletta (2017). "The narrative's 'general truth': Authenticity and the mediation of violence in Barbary captivity narratives". European Journal of American Culture. 36 (3): 209–223. doi:10.1386/ejac.36.3.209_1.
  17. ^ Baepler, Paul (1999). White Slaves, African Masters. University of Chicago Press.
  18. ^ Pope Melish, Joanne (2015). Disowning Slavery: Gradual Emancipation and "Race" in New England, 1780–1860. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-3413-6.
  19. ^ Wood, Sarah F. (2005). Quixotic Fictions of the USA, 1792-1815. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 119–120. ISBN 9780199273157.
  20. ^ Martin, Maria (1811). History of the captivity and sufferings of Maria Martin, who was six years a slave in Algiers; two of which she was confined in a dismal dungeon, loaded with irons, by the command of an inhuman Turkish officer. Written by herself. To which is added, a concise history of Algiers, with the manners and customs of the people.
  21. ^ Prince, Mary. The History of Mary Prince, a West Indian Slave: Related by Herself, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library, 2017. ProQuest Ebook Central.
  22. ^ Prince, Mary. The History of Mary Prince, a West Indian Slave: Related by Herself. p. 17.
  23. ^ Old Elizabeth (2006). Memoir of Old Elizabeth, A Coloured Woman. Extract in Margaret Busby, Daughters of Africa, Jonathan Cape, 1992, pp. 22–26.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on April 9, 2009.
  25. ^ http://www.mysticseaport.org/library/initiative/ImPage.cfm?PageNum=3&BibId=17563&ChapterId=[permanent dead link]
  26. ^ "Another Slave Narrative".
  27. ^ Whitehead, Colson (2016). The underground railroad : a novel. ISBN 9780385542364. OCLC 964759268.
  28. ^ Kakutani, Michiko (August 2, 2016). "Review: 'Underground Railroad' Lays Bare Horrors of Slavery and Its Toxic Legacy". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 7, 2017.
  29. ^ "A Conversation with Ishmael Reed By Reginald Martin" 2018-12-13 at the Wayback Machine (interview conducted July 1–7, 1983, in Emeryville, California), The Review of Contemporary Fiction, Summer 1984, Vol. 4.2. At Dalkey Archive Press.
  30. ^ Ashraf H. A. Rushdy, "Neo-slave narrative", in William L. Andrews, Frances Smith Foster & Trudier Harris (eds), Oxford Companion to African American Literature, New York/Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997, pp. 533–535.
  31. ^ Rushdy, Ashraf H.A. (1999). Neo-slave narratives: studies in the social logic of a literary form. New York [u.a.]: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195125337.
  32. ^ Love, David (May 31, 2016). "Do Slave Narratives Such as 'Roots' Have a Role in Today's Conversations?". Atlanta Black Star. Retrieved 18 July 2020.

External links

  • "Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936–1938", American Memory, Library of Congress.
  • "North American Slave Narratives, Beginnings to 1920", Documenting the American South, University of North Carolina.
  • "Slave Narratives: An Online Anthology" – WPA oral histories of former US slaves collected in the 1930s, American Studies, University of Virginia.
  • eTexts – Oral histories of former US slaves collected in the 1930s by the Work Projects Administration hosted at Project Gutenberg.
  • University of South Florida Libraries: Florida Slave Narratives[permanent dead link] Narratives of African-Americans who spent their childhood and teenage years as slaves.

slave, narrative, slave, narrative, type, literary, genre, involving, written, autobiographical, accounts, enslaved, africans, particularly, americas, over, thousand, such, narratives, estimated, exist, about, narratives, were, published, separate, books, pamp. The slave narrative is a type of literary genre involving the written autobiographical accounts of enslaved Africans particularly in the Americas Over six thousand such narratives are estimated to exist 1 about 150 narratives were published as separate books or pamphlets In the United States during the Great Depression 1930s more than 2 300 additional oral histories on life during slavery were collected by writers sponsored and published by the Works Progress Administration 2 a New Deal program Most of the 26 audio recorded interviews are held by the Library of Congress 3 Some of the earliest memoirs of captivity known in the English speaking world were written by white Europeans and later Americans captured and sometimes enslaved in North Africa by local Muslims usually Barbary pirates These were part of a broad category of captivity narratives Beginning in the 17th century these included accounts by colonists and later American settlers in North America and the United States who were captured and held by Native Americans Several well known captivity narratives were published before the American Revolution and they often followed forms established with the narratives of captivity in North Africa citation needed North African accounts did not continue to compile after the Napoleonic Era accounts from North Americans captured by western tribes migrating west continued until the end of the 19th century Given the problem of international contemporary slavery in the 20th and 21st centuries additional slave narratives are being written and published Contents 1 As a literary genre 2 North American slave narratives 2 1 Tales of religious redemption 2 2 Tales to inspire the abolitionist movement 2 3 Tales of progress 2 4 WPA slave narratives 2 5 North American slave narratives as travel literature 3 North African slave narratives 4 Women s slave narratives 5 Other historical slave narratives 6 Contemporary slave narratives 6 1 Nonfiction 6 2 Fictional 7 Neo slave narratives 8 See also 8 1 Literature 8 2 Authors of slave narratives 8 3 Other 9 References 10 External linksAs a literary genre EditThe development of slave narratives from autobiographical accounts to modern fictional works led to the establishment of slave narratives as a literary genre This large rubric of this so called captivity literature includes more generally any account of the life or a major portion of the life of a fugitive or former slave either written or orally related by the slave himself or herself 4 Whereas the first narratives told the stories of fugitive or freed slaves in a time of racial prejudice they further developed into retrospective fictional novels and extended their influence until common days Not only maintaining the memory and capturing the historical truth transmitted in these accounts but slave narratives were primarily the tool for fugitive or former slaves to state their independence in the 19th century and carry on and conserve authentic and true historical facts from a first person perspective They go further than just autobiographies and are moreover a source for reconstructing historical experience 5 The freed slaves that wrote the narratives are considered as historians since memory and history come together 6 These accounts link elements of the slave s personal life and destiny with key historical phenomena such as the American Civil War and the Underground Railroad In simple yet powerful storylines slave narratives follow in general a plot common to all of them starting from the initial situation the slave in his master s home the protagonist escapes in the wilderness and narrates the struggle for survival and recognition throughout his uncertain journey to freedom 7 After all these narratives were written retrospectively by freed slaves and or their abolitionist advocate hence the focus on the transformation from the dehumanized slave to the self emancipated free man This change often entailed literacy as a means to overcome captivity as the case of Frederick Douglass highlights The narratives are very graphic to the extent as extensive accounts of e g whipping abuse and rape of enslaved women are exposed in detail see Treatment of slaves in the United States The denunciation of the slave owners in particular their cruelty and hypocrisy is a recurring theme in slave narratives and in some examples took a comic stance denouncing the double standards e g in Douglass s narrative his slave owner Hopkins is a very religious but also brutal man According to James Olney a typical outline looks the following way A An engraved portrait signed by the narrator B A title page that includes the claim as an integral part of the title Written by Himself or some close variant Written from a statement of Facts Made by Himself or Written by a Friend as Related to Him by Brother Jones etc C A handful of testimonials and or one or more prefaces or introductions written either by a white abolitionist friend of the narrator William Lloyd Garrison Wendell Phillips or by a white amanuensis editor author actually responsible for the text John Greenleaf Whittier David Wilson Louis Alexis Chamerovzow in the course of which preface the reader is told that the narrative is a plain unvarnished tale and that naught has been set down in malice nothing exaggerated nothing drawn from the imagination indeed the tale it is claimed understates the horrors of slavery D A poetic epigraph by preference from William Cowper E The actual narrative a first sentence beginning I was born then specifying a place but not a date of birth a sketchy account of parentage often involving a white father description of a cruel master mistress or overseer details of first observed whipping and numerous subsequent whippings with women very frequently the victims an account of one extraordinarily strong hardworking slave often pure African who because there is no reason for it refuses to be whipped record of the barriers raised against slave literacy and the overwhelming difficulties encountered in learning to read and write description of a Christian slaveholder often of one such dying in terror and the accompanying claim that Christian slaveholders are invariably worse than those professing no religion description of the amounts and kinds of food and clothing given to slaves the work required of them the pattern of a day a week a year account of a slave auction of families being separated and destroyed of distraught mothers clinging to their children as they are torn from them of slave coffles being driven South description of patrols of failed attempt s to escape of pursuit by men and dogs description of successful attempt s to escape lying by during the day travelling by night guided by the North Star reception in a free state by Quakers who offer a lavish breakfast and much genial thee thou conversation taking of a new last name frequently one suggested by a white abolitionist to accord with new social identity as a free man but retention of first name as a mark of continuity of individual identity reflections on slavery F An appendix or appendices composed of documentary material bills of sale details of purchase from slavery newspaper items further reflections on slavery sermons anti slavery speeches poems appeals to the reader for funds and moral support in the battle against slavery 1 There is no consensus about what exact type of literature slave narratives are whether they can be considered as a proper genre comprised in the large category captivity narrative or are autobiographies memoirs testimonials or novels nonetheless they play a big part in keeping up the memory of slavery and in approaching a topic that was considered as a taboo for a long time especially since many denied and still deny the existence of slavery 8 Given the participation in the 19th century of abolitionist editors at least in the United States influential early 20th century historians such as Ulrich B Phillips in 1929 suggested that as a class their authenticity was doubtful These doubts have been criticized following better academic research of these narratives since the late 20th century historians have more often validated the accounts of slaves about their own experiences 9 North American slave narratives EditSlave narratives by African slaves from North America were first published in England in the 18th century They soon became the main form of African American literature in the 19th century Slave narratives were publicized by abolitionists who sometimes participated as editors or writers if slaves were not literate During the first half of the 19th century the controversy over slavery in the United States led to impassioned literature on both sides of the issue To present the reality of slavery a number of former slaves such as Harriet Tubman Harriet Jacobs and Frederick Douglass published accounts of their enslavement and their escapes to freedom Lucy Delaney wrote an account that included the freedom suit waged by her mother in Missouri for their freedom Eventually some 6 000 former slaves from North America and the Caribbean wrote accounts of their lives and over 100 book length accounts were published from formerly enslaved people worldwide 10 Before the American Civil War some authors wrote fictional accounts of slavery to create support for abolitionism The prime example is Uncle Tom s Cabin 1852 by Harriet Beecher Stowe The success of her novel and the social tensions of the time brought a response by white Southern writers such as William Gilmore Simms and Mary Eastman who published what were called anti Tom novels Both kinds of novels were bestsellers in the 1850s Tales of religious redemption Edit From the 1770s to the 1820s slave narratives generally gave an account of a spiritual journey leading to Christian redemption The authors usually characterized themselves as Africans rather than slaves as most were born in Africa Examples include Ukawsaw Gronniosaw A Narrative of the Most Remarkable Particulars in the Life of James Albert Ukawsaw Gronniosaw an African Prince Bath England 1772 Olaudah Equiano The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano London 1789 Venture Smith A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Venture a Native of Africa But Resident Above Sixty Years in the United States of America New London 1798 Jeffrey Brace The Blind African Slave Or Memoirs of Boyrereau Brinch Nicknamed Jeffrey Brace as told to Benjamin F Prentiss Esq St Albans Vermont 1810 11 edited and with an introduction by Kari J Winter Madison WI University of Wisconsin Press 2004 ISBN 0 299 20140 6 12 John Jea The Life History and Unparalleled Sufferings of John Jea the African Preacher 1811 Greensbury Washington Offley A Narrative of the Life and Labors of the Rev G W Offley a Colored Man Local Preacher and Missionary 1859Some more recent narratives such as Petro Kilekwa s Slave Boy to Priest The Autobiography of Padre Petro Kilekwa 1937 followed a similar theme Tales to inspire the abolitionist movement Edit From the mid 1820s writers consciously chose the autobiographical form to generate enthusiasms for the abolitionist movement Some writers adopted literary techniques including the use of fictionalized dialogue Between 1835 and 1865 more than 80 such narratives were published Recurrent features include slave auctions the break up of families and frequently two accounts of escapes one of which is successful As this was the period of the forced migration of an estimated one million slaves from the Upper South to the Deep South through the internal slave trade the experiences of auctions and separation of families were common to many Examples include William Grimes Life of William Grimes the Runaway Slave New York 1825 Solomon Bayley A Narrative of Some Remarkable Incidents in the Life of Solomon Bayley Formerly a Slave in the State of Delaware North America 1825 Mary Prince The History of Mary Prince a West Indian Slave London 1831 Charles Ball Slavery in the United States A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Charles Ball A Black Man Lewistown 1836 Moses Roper A Narrative of Adventures and Escape of Moses Roper from American Slavery London 1837 Lunsford Lane The Narrative of Lunsford Lane Formerly of Raleigh N C Embracing an Account of His Early Life the Redemption by Purchase of Himself and Family from Slavery and His Banishment from the Place of His Birth for the Crime of Wearing a Colored Skin 1842 Frederick Douglass Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass an American Slave Boston 1845 Lewis and Milton Clarke Narratives of the Sufferings of Lewis and Milton Clarke Sons of a Soldier of the Revolution During a Captivity of More Than Twenty Years Among the Slaveholders of Kentucky One of the So Called Christian States of North America Boston 1846 William Wells Brown Narrative of William Wells Brown a Fugitive Slave Boston 1847 Henry Box Brown Narrative of the Life of Henry Box Brown Boston 1849 Josiah Henson The Life of Josiah Henson Formerly a Slave Now an Inhabitant of Canada as Narrated by Himself Boston 1849 Henry Bibb Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb an American Slave New York 1849 James W C Pennington The Fugitive Blacksmith or Events in the History of James W C Pennington London 1849 Henry Watson Narrative of Henry Watson A Fugitive Slave Boston 1848 Solomon Northup Twelve Years a Slave Auburn and Buffalo New York and London 1853 John Brown Slave Life in Georgia A Narrative of the Life Sufferings and Escape of John Brown a Fugitive Slave Now in England 1855 The Life of John Thompson A Fugitive Slave Worcester Massachusetts 1855 Kate E R Pickard The Kidnapped and the Ransomed Being the Personal Recollections of Peter Still and his Wife Vina after Forty Years of Slavery New York 1856 Jermain Wesley Loguen The Rev J W Loguen as a Slave and as a Freeman a Narrative of Real Life 1859 Ellen and William Craft Running a thousand Miles for Freedom or the Escape of William and Ellen Craft from Slavery London 1860 Harriet Jacobs Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl Boston 1861 John Andrew Jackson The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina London 1862 Jacob D Green Narrative of the Life of J D Green a Runaway Slave from Kentucky Huddersfield 1864 Recollections of Slavery by a Runaway Slave The Emancipator August 23 September 13 September 20 October 11 October 18 1838 http docsouth unc edu neh runaway menu html retrieved 09 15 2014 13 Tales of progress Edit Slave narrative of Thomas H Jones published in 1871 Following the defeat of the slave states of the Confederate South the authors had less need to convey the evils of slavery Some gave a sentimental account of plantation life and ended with the narrator adjusting to the new life of freedom The emphasis of writers shifted conceptually toward a recounting of individual and racial progress rather than securing freedom Examples include James Mars The Life of James Mars A Slave Born and Sold in Connecticut Hartford 1864 Paul Jennings A Colored Man s Reminiscences of James Madison 1865 William Parker The Freedman s Story published in The Atlantic Monthly 1866 Elizabeth Keckley Behind the Scenes Or Thirty Years a Slave and Four Years in the White House 1868 William Still The Underground Railroad Records 1872 recounts the experiences of hundreds of slaves James Lindsay Smith Autobiography of James L Smith 1881 published by the Norwich Bulletin Lucy Delaney From the Darkness Cometh the Light or Struggles for Freedom 1892 this is unique as the only first person account of a successful freedom suit Louis Hughes Thirty Years a Slave From Bondage to Freedom Milwaukee 1897 Booker T Washington Up From Slavery Garden City New York 1901 Sam Aleckson Before the War and After the Union An Autobiography Boston 1929WPA slave narratives Edit Main article Slave Narrative Collection During the Great Depression of the 1930s the New Deal Works Projects Administration WPA employed writers and researchers from the Federal Writers Project to interview and document the stories of African Americans who were former slaves Most had been children when the Thirteenth Amendment was passed Produced between 1936 and 1938 the narratives recount the experiences of more than 2 300 former slaves Some interviews were recorded 23 of 26 known audio recordings are held by the American Folklife Center of the Library of Congress 3 14 The last interview of a former slave was with Fountain Hughes then 101 in Baltimore Maryland in 1949 3 He was a grandson of a slave owned by President Thomas Jefferson at Monticello North American slave narratives as travel literature Edit Slave narratives inherently involved travel and form a significant type of travel writing As John Cox says in Traveling South travel was a necessary prelude to the publication of a narrative by a slave for slavery could not be simultaneously experienced and written Where many travel narratives are written by privileged travelers slave narratives show people traveling despite significant legal barriers to their actions and in this way are a distinct and essential element in how travel narratives formed the American character 15 North African slave narratives EditIn comparison to North American and Caribbean slave narratives the North African slave narratives in English were written by British and American white slaves captured often at sea or through Barbary pirates and enslaved in North Africa in the 18th and early 19th centuries These narratives have a distinct form in that they highlight the otherness of the Muslim slave traders whereas the African American slave narratives often call slave traders to account as fellow Christians Narratives focused on the central themes of freedom and liberty which drew inspiration from the American Revolution Since the narratives include the recurrence of themes and events quoting and relying heavily upon each other it is believed by scholars that the main source of information was other narratives more so than real captivities 16 Female captives were depicted as Gothic fiction characters clinging to the hope of freedom thus more relatable to the audience 17 Examples include Charles Sumner 1847 White Slavery in the Barbary States A lecture before the Boston Mercantile Library Association Feb 17 1847 ISBN 9781092289818 A True and Faithful Account of the Religion and Manners of the Mahometans by Joseph Pitts 1663 1735 tells his capture as a boy age 14 or 15 by pirates while fishing off Newfoundland His sale as a slave and his life under three different masters in North Africa and his travels to Mecca are all described Tyrkja Gudda 1952 and 2001 Thomas Pellow The History of the Long Captivity and Adventures of Thomas Pellow In South Barbary 1740 A Curious Historical and Entertaining Narrative of the Captivity and almost unheard of Sufferings and Cruel treatment of Mr Robert White 1790 18 A Journal of the Captivity and Suffering of John Foss Several Years a Prisoner in Algiers 1798 19 History of the Captivity and Sufferings of Mrs Maria Martin who was six years a slave in Algiers two of which she was confined in a dismal dungeon loaded with irons by the command of an inhuman Turkish officer Written by herself To which is added a concise history of Algiers with the manners and customs of the people 1812 20 Captain James Riley Sufferings in Africa 1815 The Narrative of Robert Adams An American Sailor who was wrecked on the West Coast of Africa in the year 1810 was detained Three Years in Slavery by the Arabs of the Great Desert 1816 James Leander Cathcart The Captives Eleven Years a Prisoner in Algiers published in 1899 many years after his captivityWomen s slave narratives EditNarratives by enslaved women include the memoirs of Harriet Jacobs Mary Prince Mattie J Jackson and old Elizabeth among others In her narrative Mary Prince a Bermuda born woman and slave discusses her deep connection with her master s wife and the pity she felt for the wife as she witnessed the ill treatment the wife suffered at the hands of her husband 21 Prince was taught to read by Moravian missionaries 22 Literacy however was not a common theme for all enslaved women The life story of old Elizabeth was transcribed from her oral account at the age of 97 23 Other historical slave narratives EditAs slavery has been practised all over the world for millennia some narratives cover places and times other than these main two One example is the account given by John R Jewitt an English armourer enslaved for years by Maquinna of the Nootka people in the Pacific Northwest The Canadian Encyclopedia calls his memoir a classic of captivity literature 24 and it is a rich source of information about the indigenous people of Vancouver Island Narrative of the Adventures and Sufferings of John R Jewitt only survivor of the crew of the ship Boston during a captivity of nearly three years among the savages of Nootka Sound with an account of the manners mode of living and religious opinions of the natives Middletown Connecticut printed by Loomis and Richards 1815 25 Maria ter Meetelen 1704 in Amsterdam fl 1751 was a Dutch writer of an autobiography Her biography is considered to be a valuable witness statement of the life of a former slave 1748 Maria ter Meetelen The Curious and Amazing Adventures of Maria ter Meetelen Twelve Years a Slave 1731 43 Translated and Introduced by Caroline Stone Hardinge Simpole 2010 1 Contemporary slave narratives EditNonfiction Edit A contemporary slave narrative is a recent memoir written by a former slave or ghost written on their behalf Modern areas of the world in which slavery occurs include the Sudan Escape from Slavery The True Story of My Ten Years in Captivity and My Journey to Freedom in America 2003 by Francis Bok and Edward Tivnan and Slave by Mende Nazer and Damien Lewis describe from slavery experiences in the Sudan Another Slave Narrative a film series was launched by filmmaker Michelle Jackson on December 18 2016 26 Jackson inspired by an interview with a former slave decided to present the stories of previously enslaved people in a series of short films A cast of 22 actors of mixed sex race and age read out individual slaves interviews from the Slave Narrative Collection which includes more than 2 300 interviews conducted from 1936 38 Jackson s aim is to document every single fate and hence approach the taboo of slavery and keep the memory of the slaves alive through these videos Fictional Edit The Underground Railroad by National Book Award winner Colson Whitehead takes place in an alternative version of the 19th century Cora a slave on a cotton farm in Georgia escapes via the Underground Railroad 27 The novel was well received It was said to possess the chilling matter of fact power of the slave narratives collected by the Federal Writers Project in the 1930s with echoes of Toni Morrison s Beloved and could be considered as a modern tale fictional slave narrative 28 Neo slave narratives EditA neo slave narrative a term coined by Ishmael Reed while working on his 1976 novel Flight to Canada and used by him in a 1984 interview 29 is a modern fictional work set in the slavery era by contemporary authors or substantially concerned with depicting the experience or the effects of enslavement in the New World 30 The works are largely classified as novels but may pertain to poetical works as well The renaissance of the postmodern slave narratives in the 20th century was a means to deal retrospectively with slavery and to give a fictional account of historical facts from the first person perspective 31 Examples include Madison Smartt Bell All Souls Rising 1995 first of trilogy about the Haitian Revolution David Bradley The Chaneysville Incident 1981 Octavia E Butler Kindred 1979 Noni Carter Good Fortune 2010 young adult novel David Anthony Durham Walk Through Darkness 2002 Ernest J Gaines The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman 1971 Alex Haley Roots The Saga of an American Family 1976 32 Marie Elena John Unburnable 2006 Edward P Jones The Known World 2003 Toni Morrison Beloved 1987 William Styron Confessions of Nat Turner 1967 Natasha Trethewey Native Guard 2006 Margaret Walker Jubilee 1966 Sherley Anne Williams Dessa Rose 1986 Evelyne Trouillot The Infamous Rosalie 2003 Manu Herbstein Ama A Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade 2001 Manu Herbstein Brave Music of a Distant Drum 2011 Colson Whitehead The Underground Railroad 2016 See also EditLiterature Edit African American literature Caribbean literatureAuthors of slave narratives Edit William J Anderson Jared Maurice Arter Lewis Charlton Lucinda Davis Moses Grandy Lunsford Lane J Vance Lewis Moses Roper Wallace Turnage John M WashingtonOther Edit Unchained Memories HBO documentary with readings from slave narratives 2003 References Edit a b Olney James 1984 I Was Born Slave Narratives Their Status as Autobiography and as Literature Callaloo 20 20 46 73 doi 10 2307 2930678 JSTOR 2930678 Greene Bob February 17 2013 America s Slave Narratives should shock us CNN a b c Interview with Fountain Hughes Baltimore Maryland June 11 1949 American Folklife Center Library of Congress World Digital Library Retrieved May 26 2013 Andrews William How to Read a Slave Narrative The Slave Narratives A Genre and a Source The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History www gilderlehrman org August 6 2012 Archived from the original on March 17 2017 Retrieved March 8 2017 John Ernest January 1 2014 The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative Oxford Univ Press ISBN 9780199731480 OCLC 881290138 Frances Smith Foster January 1 1994 Witnessing slavery the development of ante bellum slave narratives University of Wisconsin law school ISBN 9780299142148 OCLC 800963917 Slavery Denial slavenorth com Retrieved March 16 2017 Nichols William W 1971 Slave Narratives Dismissed Evidence in the Writing of Southern History Phylon 32 4 403 409 doi 10 2307 274066 JSTOR 274066 Schmidt Arnold 1997 Narratives In Rodriguez Junius P ed The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery ABC CLIO pp 457 58 ISBN 9780874368857 Boyrereau Brinch and Benjamin F Prentiss Benjamin Franklin 1774 or 5 1817 Documenting the South University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Retrieved March 4 2013 Taken Aback in Vermont Seven Days July 6 2005 Susanna Ashton Slaves of Charleston The Forward September 19 2014 pp 13 and 16 Library of Congress Project WPA Slave Narratives A Folk History of Slavery in the United States from Interviews with Former Slaves Volume II Arkansas Narratives Part 3 Washington DC Library of Congress 1941 Retrieved December 31 2010 Cox John D 2005 Traveling South Travel Narratives and the Construction of American Identity University of Georgia Press pp 64 66 ISBN 9780820330860 Papadopoulou Nikoletta 2017 The narrative s general truth Authenticity and the mediation of violence in Barbary captivity narratives European Journal of American Culture 36 3 209 223 doi 10 1386 ejac 36 3 209 1 Baepler Paul 1999 White Slaves African Masters University of Chicago Press Pope Melish Joanne 2015 Disowning Slavery Gradual Emancipation and Race in New England 1780 1860 Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 3413 6 Wood Sarah F 2005 Quixotic Fictions of the USA 1792 1815 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 119 120 ISBN 9780199273157 Martin Maria 1811 History of the captivity and sufferings of Maria Martin who was six years a slave in Algiers two of which she was confined in a dismal dungeon loaded with irons by the command of an inhuman Turkish officer Written by herself To which is added a concise history of Algiers with the manners and customs of the people Prince Mary The History of Mary Prince a West Indian Slave Related by Herself University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library 2017 ProQuest Ebook Central Prince Mary The History of Mary Prince a West Indian Slave Related by Herself p 17 Old Elizabeth 2006 Memoir of Old Elizabeth A Coloured Woman Extract in Margaret Busby Daughters of Africa Jonathan Cape 1992 pp 22 26 Jewitt John Rodgers Archived from the original on April 9 2009 http www mysticseaport org library initiative ImPage cfm PageNum 3 amp BibId 17563 amp ChapterId permanent dead link Another Slave Narrative Whitehead Colson 2016 The underground railroad a novel ISBN 9780385542364 OCLC 964759268 Kakutani Michiko August 2 2016 Review Underground Railroad Lays Bare Horrors of Slavery and Its Toxic Legacy The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 7 2017 A Conversation with Ishmael Reed By Reginald Martin Archived 2018 12 13 at the Wayback Machine interview conducted July 1 7 1983 in Emeryville California The Review of Contemporary Fiction Summer 1984 Vol 4 2 At Dalkey Archive Press Ashraf H A Rushdy Neo slave narrative in William L Andrews Frances Smith Foster amp Trudier Harris eds Oxford Companion to African American Literature New York Oxford Oxford University Press 1997 pp 533 535 Rushdy Ashraf H A 1999 Neo slave narratives studies in the social logic of a literary form New York u a Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195125337 Love David May 31 2016 Do Slave Narratives Such as Roots Have a Role in Today s Conversations Atlanta Black Star Retrieved 18 July 2020 External links Edit Born in Slavery Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers Project 1936 1938 American Memory Library of Congress North American Slave Narratives Beginnings to 1920 Documenting the American South University of North Carolina Slave Narratives An Online Anthology WPA oral histories of former US slaves collected in the 1930s American Studies University of Virginia eTexts Oral histories of former US slaves collected in the 1930s by the Work Projects Administration hosted at Project Gutenberg University of South Florida Libraries Florida Slave Narratives permanent dead link Narratives of African Americans who spent their childhood and teenage years as slaves Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slave narrative amp oldid 1134253281, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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