In this Book

The Many Resurrections of Henry Box Brown

Book
Martha J. Cutter
2022
summary

On March 23, 1849, Henry Brown climbed into a large wooden postal crate and was mailed from slavery in Richmond, Virginia, to freedom in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. “Box Brown,” as he came to be known after this astounding feat, went on to carve out a career as an abolitionist speaker, actor, magician, hypnotist, and even faith healer, traveling the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada until his death in 1897.

The Many Resurrections of Henry Box Brown is the first book to show how subversive performances were woven into Brown’s entire life, from his early days practicing magic in Virginia while enslaved, to his last shows in Canada and England in the 1890s. It recovers forgotten elements of Brown’s history to illustrate the ways he made himself a spectacle on abolitionist lecture circuits via outlandish performances, and then fell off these circuits and went on to reinvent himself again and again. Brown’s stunts included creating a moving panoramic picture show about his escape; parading through the streets dressed as a “Savage Indian” or “African Prince”; convincing hypnotized individuals that they were sheep who would gobble down raw cabbage; performing magic, dark séances, and ventriloquism; and even climbing back into his “original” box to jump out of it on stage.

In this study, Martha J. Cutter analyzes contemporary resurrections of Brown’s persona by leading poets, writers, and visual artists. Both in Brown’s time and in ours, stories were created, invented, and embellished about Brown, continuing to recreate his intriguing, albeit fragmentary and elusive, story. The Many Resurrections of Henry Box Brown fosters a new understanding not only of Brown’s life but of modern Black performance art that provocatively dramatizes the unfinished work of African American freedom.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title Page, Title Page, Copyright

pp. i-iv

Contents

pp. v-vi

Acknowledgments

pp. vii-viii

Abbreviations for Archives Consulted

pp. ix-x

Introduction. The Many Resurrections of Henry Box Brown, the Man Who Mailed Himself to Freedom

pp. 1-10

Chapter 1. Slavery and Freedom in US Visual Culture: The Performative Personae of William Wells Brown, William and Ellen Craft, Frederick Douglass, and Sojourner Truth

pp. 11-57

Chapter 2. Becoming Box Brown, 1815-1857

pp. 58-111

Chapter 3. Performing Fugitivity: Henry Box Brown on the Nineteenth-Century British Stage, 1857

pp. 112-131

Chapter 4. Performing New Panoramas, Mesmerism, Spiritualism, and Second Sight, England, 1857-1875

pp. 132-182

Chapter 5. Canada, the United States, and Beyond: Performing Slavery and Freedom, 1875-1897

pp. 183-221

Chapter 6. The Absent Presence: Henry Box Brown in Contemporary Museums, Memorials, and Visual Art

pp. 222-252

Chapter 7. Playing in the Archives: Box Brown in Contemporary Children's Literature and Visual Poetry

pp. 253-290

Coda. The Resilience of Box Brown and the Afterlives of Slavery

pp. 291-298

Appendix. Selected Contemporary Creative Works About Henry Box Brown

pp. 299-302

Notes

pp. 303-338

Index

pp. 339-358

Color Plates

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