Olaudah Equiano: Narrative Voice

advertisement

Olaudah Equiano: Narrative

Voice

Slave Trade and the Middle

Passage

Background: African Slavery

• Europeans first arrived in

Africa in 1441

• Slavery existed in Africa prior to this period

• African slavery was different from

European/American slavery

Background: African Slavery

• African slavery lacked a racial dimension

• In Africa, slaves could: marry, own property, and own other slaves

• African slavery ended after a certain number of years of servitude

• Slaves were not passed on from generation to generation

Background: American Slavery

• Initially, American slavery was a variation of indentured servitude and slaves would be freed after a certain number of years in service

• The English only enslaved

“non-Christian” people

• 1662: Virginia passes a law stating that the children of slaves would be slaves

• Slaves could not own property, marry, vote, be educated

• Slaves had no legal status

Background: The Slave Trade

1641: Massachusetts becomes the first colony to recognize slavery as a legal institution.

1680: The Royal African company transports 5000

African captives annually.

By the 18th century, 45,000

Africans are transported annually on British ships.

Slaves packed like cargo between decks often had to lie in each other's feces, urine, and blood.

Background: Life on Ship

1781-90 Height of African slave trade: 88,800 Africans transported to New

World each year.

In all 10-12 million people were taken from Africa and made slaves.

Barry Unsworth on the Middle Passages

• Q: Can you describe the Middle Passage?

A: There is the diagram of a slave ship, showing precisely how the slaves themselves were stowed, how they were placed for the voyage when they were below decks or between decks. Typically there were two levels, one above the other, on either side of the ship, with a central passageway.

They had about 18 inches head room, less than 2 feet head room. They couldn't sit. And because they were manacled, they couldn't really change position very easily at all, without hurting themselves or their companions. When the weather was rough they were kept below for a long period. It must have been a nightmare. In the mornings, after the end of periods of bad weather, when they could finally get down there, they would find two manacled together, one dead and one living. It was quite a common experience. I think that in terms of hell on earth, that must have been as near as anyone ever comes, I think, to it.

Olaudah Equiano

• Who are we looking for, who are we looking for?

It's Equiano we're looking for.

Has he gone to the stream?

Let him come back.

Has he gone to the farm? Let him return.

It's Equiano we're looking for.

- Kwa chant about the disappearance of an African boy, Equiano

Three Part Structure of the Slave

Narrative

• Enslavement

• Escape

• Freedom

Abolitionist Literature and Audience

• The tradition of Slave Autobiography and

Abolitionist Literature begins with Olaudah

Equiano’s Narrative.

• The specific reason these texts are written is to bring about political change.

Characteristics of Slave Narratives

• The Testimonial/Letter of Authenticity: the text begins with a letter from a white editor or prominent person verifying that the former slave has actually written the narrative

• Equiano’s narrative is different in that he begins with an Epistle Dedicatory

Author’s name included somewhere in the title, the phrase “as written by him/herself,” and an identification of the author as a slave or African

Simple forthright style

"I believe it is difficult for those who publish their own memoirs to escape the imputation of vanity. . . People generally think those memoirs only worthy to be read or remembered which abound in great striking events, those, in short, which in a high degree excite either admiration or pity; all others they consign to contempt or oblivion. It is therefore, I confess, not a little hazardous in a private and obscure individual, and a stranger too, thus to solicit the indulgent attention of the public, especially when I own I offer here the history of neither a saint, a hero, nor a tyrant.

I believe there are few events in my life which have not happened to many; it is true the incidents of it are numerous, and, did I consider myself an European, I might say my sufferings were great; but when I compare my lot with that of most of my countrymen, I regard myself as a particular favorite of heaven, and acknowledge the mercies of Providence in every occurrence of my life. If, then, the following narrative does not appear sufficiently interesting to engage general attention, let my motive be some excuse for its publication."

Vivid Characters, Scenes of Great

Violence, and Harrowing Escapes

Patterned after Biblical story of

Moses and the Egyptian Captivity

• Slave Narratives have a religious overtone

• The ultimate goal of the slave is to escape to the “promised land” of freedom

Common Themes of the Slave

Narrative

• Quest for freedom

• Search for home

• Redemption and Salvation

• Search for the deliverance from evil

• Crossing of boundaries

Themes in Equiano’s Narrative

• Freedom and Salvation

• The Symbolic Power of Naming

• Identity

• Racial Equality

Influences on Equiano’s Narrative

• Protestant Conversion Narrative

• Anthropology

• Adventure Novels

• Enlightenment Philosophy

Activity

• Find an example of enslavement in the

Equiano text.

• Find an example of escape.

• Find an example of freedom.

• Find an example of sentimentality.

• Fin an example of each of the characteristics of slave narratives.

Download