In this Book

Before Equiano: A Prehistory of the North American Slave Narrative

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2022
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summary
In the antebellum United States, formerly enslaved men and women who told their stories and advocated for abolition helped establish a new genre with widely recognized tropes: the slave narrative. This book investigates how enslaved black Africans conceived of themselves and their stories before the War of American Independence and the genre’s development in the nineteenth century. Zachary McLeod Hutchins argues that colonial newspapers were pivotal in shaping popular understandings of both slavery and the black African experience well before the slave narrative’s proliferation. Introducing the voices and art of black Africans long excluded from the annals of literary history, Hutchins shows how the earliest life writing by and about enslaved black Africans established them as political agents in an Atlantic world defined by diplomacy, war, and foreign relations. In recovering their stories, Hutchins sheds new light on how black Africans became Black Americans; how the earliest accounts of enslaved life were composed editorially from textual fragments rather than authored by a single hand; and how the public discourse of slavery shifted from the language of just wars and foreign policy to a heritable, race-based system of domestic oppression.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title Page, Title Page, Copyright, Dedication

pp. i-vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

List of Figures and Tables

pp. ix-x

Acknowledgments

pp. xi-xiv

Introduction: Slavery and the Newspaper: A Foreign Affair

pp. 1-31

Chapter One: Sewall's Secret: The Selling of More than Two Dozen Black Africans

pp. 32-63

Chapter Two: Daniel and the Scotts: The Serialized Stories of Serial Runaways

pp. 64-98

Chapter Three: Royalty Enslaved: Of Princes, Pretenders, and Politics

pp. 99-132

Chapter Four: Fighting for, and against, the British: Briton Hammon and the Power of Enslaved Black Africans' Allegiance

pp. 133-159

Chapter Five: Narratives of Slavery and the Stamp Act: Dickinson and Cr\xC3\xA9vecoeur Debate the Racial Limits of a Genre

pp. 160-191

Conclusion: After Equiano: The Medium and the Message

pp. 192-200

Appendix: The Poetic Works of Peter and Caesar

pp. 201-226

Notes

pp. 227-280

Index

pp. 281-292
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