African-American Literature Handout
Updated: April 7, 1996
- Background of Africans in the English Colonies
- Some Significant Dates
- Some Specific Information on South Carolina
- African American Writings
- Early African American Works (1740-1820)
- Antebellum Novels (1820-1860)
- Slave Narratives (1840-1860)
- Postbellum Novelists (1865-1900)
- Social Works (1900-1910)
- Post 1900 African American Literatue
- Harlem Renessance (1917-1935)
- Growth of Naturalism (1935-1945)
- Myth, ledgend and Ritual (1945-1960)
- Contemporary African American Literature (1960-present)
- Sources
- Background of Africans in the English Colonies a>
- Some Significant Dates
- 1540
- Africans in Arizona with the Spanish ("Death of the Negro Estervan")
- 1619
- 20 Slaves brought to Jamestown, VA by the Dutch
- 1620
- Pilgrims land at Plymouth Rock
- 1638
- Slaves brought to MA (slavery legalized in 1641)
- 1661
- Slavery legalized in VA
- 1670
- Permanent settlement of African slaves in SC
- 1691
- VA bans interracial marriages
- 1705
- Slaves defined as "real estate" in VA
- 1740
- Stono Slave Rebellion Consequences
- 1772
- Lord Mansfield Decision - made owning a slave in Britain illegal
- 1776-1781
- Revolutionary War
- 1790
- 642,000 African in the South (35% of population) (1976 data) (J.E. Inikori, General History Of Africa , Vol. V)
- 1807
- Britain abolished slave trade See Gustavas Vassa's Role
- 1808
- Britain uses Sierra Leone (W. Africa) to resettle ex-slaves
- 1812
- War of 1812 with the British
- 1821
- Liberia (W. Africa) established by the American Colonization Society to resettle Blacks See MarcusGarvey
- 1850
- 3,117.000 (34% of the South's population) (Inikori, pp 92-104 1976data)
- Angola-Congo- highest proportion of males
- Benin - highest proportion of females
- 3,700,000 African brought to British Colonies (Inikori, 1976 data)
- 22,000,000 African sold worldwide into slavery between 1500-1900 (Inikori, 1976data)
Cross reference with Holloways's data
- 1861-1865
- American Civil War
- 1862
- Slave trade protected in American up to this date
( General History of Africa, Vol. VI p. 73)
- 1865-1877
- Reconstruction Era See Postbellum Works
- 1866
- KKK founded See Social Works
- Some Specific Information on SC
Holloway - "Origins of African American Culture"
- 1670-1700
- Senegal Gambian region of West Africa is the primary origin forAfricans, mostly from the Wolof states. Holloway points out that this group was large since the Wolofstates in Africa had just broken up and rival warlords sold POW's as slaves.
- 1706-1724
- 5,081 Africans arrive through SC
- 1721-1726
- 3,632 Africans arrive through SC
- 1733-1744
- 60% of Africans slaves imported to SC are from the Congo-Angolaregion
- 1749-1787
- Only 15% are from Angola-Congo region (due to Stono Rebellion)
- 1804-1807
- 53% are from the Angola-Congo region
Holloway makes the following observations:
-
- Most Africans from West Africa (Mande/Akan) were used as either house servants orartisans.On the other hand, most of the Africans from the Angola-Congo region (Bantu speaking) wereused as field slaves. Holloway indicates that this selection was not accidental as the Africansfrom different parts of Africa where sold on the basis of their African skills. Holloway citeshistorical documents (broken down by region and time period) to support this point.He also presents advertisements that told buyers about the region slaves came from and thebenefits of slaves from various regions. For example, he states that Africans fromthe Gambian delta were sought after by people in the Maryland area becauseof the similarities in land use.
- Holloway further points out that the Bantu speaking people of the Angola-Congo regionwho worked primarily as field slaves had little contact with English speakers. As a result, he contends that they were better able to keep their language and culture. (The peopleof this region spoke various dialects of Bantu and thus were able to better communicatewith each other than the West Africans who spoke more widely separated languages. The Bantu language group originated in SE Nigeria and spread over Central and Southern Africa.) He goesonto state that Angolans were desirable for Southern plantations because they were advertised as"large and robust" and he points out that buyers were aware of the similarity of farming conditions in the South and the Angola-Congo region to support his point.
- Holloway mentions that the West Africans who became House servants more quicklydeveloped a Creole with the English speaker. He cites the case of the "Black Mammy"who generally came from Guinea.
-
- In the North, most Africans were brought from West Africa.
- In the South, most Africans were brought from the Angola-Congo region
- African American Writings
See: African American Literature Handout
From The Afro-American Novel and Its Tradition, Bernard Bell, 1987. And Masterpieces of African American Literature, Magall, 1992.
Early African American Works (1749-1820)
- 1749
- Terry Lucy (African/MA) "Bars Fight" - earliest work
- 1773
- Phillis Wheatley (Senegal/MA) First published African-American poet; second women to be published after Anne Bradstreet in the English Colonies. Wrotein standard English. Published in England. Wrote elegies starting at the age of 12
- 1789
- Olaudah Equiano (Gustavas Vassa); Benin/VA; Firstslave narrative. Published in England, his writings influence the abolishment of the slavetrade in England in 1807
- 1817
- George Moses Horton -first African southern (NC) man to publish poetry; wrote on mostly religious themes.
Antebellum Novels 1820-1860
- Clotel
- William Welles Brown "injustice of miscegenation and theplight of the female mulatto" (1853)
- Garies and Their Friends
- Frank J Weeb
- Our Nig
- Harriet Wilson - life of the indentured female servant (1859)
- Blake
- Martin Robinson Delany deals with political issues
Slave Narratives (1840-1860)
- Frederick Douglas (1845)
- Narrative of The Life of Frederick Douglas
- William Weldon Brown (1855)
- Autobiographical Writings of William Weldon Brown
- Harriet Jacobs (1861)
-
Postbellum Novelists (1865-1901)
Two of the frequently dealt with issues were "passing" for white and the Plantation Narrative.
- Frances Ellen Watkins Harperr
- Iola Leroy (1892) -"moral duty of mulattos torepress the urge to pass for white"
- Joel Chandler Harris
- "Uncle Ramus" stories. Presented plantation life from a romantic point of view.
- Charles Waddell Chestnut
- First African American published fiction writer Conjure Women - collection of short stories. Uncle Julius is contrasted with Joel Chandler Harris' Uncle Ramus. Chestnut presented images of plantation life tocounter the image presented by Harris
- Paul Lawrence Dunbar
- Short stories, poems and novels "We Wear the Mask"Wrote in both dialect and standard English. His dialect works were generally preferred.
- Social Works (1890-1910)
- Booker T. Washington
- Up From Slavery 1901
- W.E.B. DuBois
- Soul of Black Folks 1903
- Marcus Garvey
- "Africa For Africans" 1920 Argued for Blacksin America to return to Africa, specifically Liberia.
- Bell, Bernard. The Afro-American Novel and Its Tradation.Amhert: University of Massachusetts Press, 1987.
- Holloway, J. "The Origins of African-American Culture".Africanisms in American Culture, Joseph Holloway. ed.Indianapolis:Indiana UP, 1990.
- General History of Africa, Vol. 5. B.A. Ogot. ed., Berkley:University of California Press, 1992.
- General History of Africa, Vol 6. J. F. Ade Ajayi. ed., Berkley:University of California Press, 1992.
- Magill, Frank. Ed. Masterpieces of African-American Literature.New York:Harper Collins, 1992.
Richard Varron
Last Updated: March 30, 1996
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