Slave memoirs yanked the veil off of America's facade
Narratives by formerly enslaved writers were critical to shedding light on the unthinkable realities of enslavement.
Feb. 13, 2024, 7:00 AM CST
By Zahara Hill
In the everlasting faceoff between Black history and Americas self-conception, its worth revisiting one of the fights earliest and most valiant weapons of war: the slave memoir.
Narratives by formerly enslaved writers like Olaudah Equiano, Frederick Douglass and Solomon Northup were critical to shedding light on the otherwise unthinkable realities of enslavement. Whatever idea of civility and morality America wanted to project to the world, slave memoirs were gutting proof to the contrary.
They emphasize the torture, they emphasize the separation of families, they emphasize the slave trade that would reduce human beings to property.
Manisha Sinha historian
The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass one of the foremost examples of the literary genre offered a firsthand glimpse into the depravities that constituted chattel slavery. In it, Douglass recounts being emotionally and physically brutalized by Edward Covey, who had a reputation as a slave-breaker, and watching slaveholders cite Bible verses as they whipped the enslaved, among other atrocities.
The scholar says he was first introduced to the cruelties of enslavement when he saw his Aunt Hester stripped and beaten by her slaveholder, Captain Anthony. Douglass writes that his aunt was being punished for going against Anthonys demands. But the author also suspected the slaveholder had a sexual interest in his aunt and that his attack was retaliatory because shed recently spent time with a male slave. (Harriet Jacobs 1861 Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl also provides further insight into the deplorably complex experiences of enslaved women.)
More:
https://www.msnbc.com/the-reidout/reidout-blog/slave-memoirs-american-history-rcna137930