Fugitive Slave, Fugitive Novelist: The Narrative of James Williams (1838)
Author:
Santamarina Xiomara
Abstract
AbstractThis essay argues for reading a discredited slave narrative—the Narrative of James Williams (1838)—as an early black novel. Reading this narrative as a founding black novel à la Robinson Crusoe complicates the genealogy and theoretical parameters of literary criticism about early US black fiction. Such a reading revises accounts about the emergence of the third-person fictive voice inaugurated by Frederick Douglass and William Wells Brown in the 1850s. It also offers a new understanding of the antislavery movement’s quest for authenticity. More importantly, reading NJW as novelistic fiction illustrates how a fugitive slave might narrativize muddied textual politics and effectively challenge the reparative vision with which we theorize the genres and politics of early African American literary texts.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,History,Cultural Studies
Reference29 articles.
1. “Alabama Beacon versus James Williams.”;The Emancipator,30 . 1838
2. “The Novelization of Voice in Early African American Narrative.”;Andrews;PMLA,. 1990
3. “White Slaves: The Mulatto Hero in Antebellum Fiction.”;Bentley;American Literature,. 1993
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