Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Social Death and Political Life in the Study of Slavery

2009; Oxford University Press; Volume: 114; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1086/ahr.114.5.1231

ISSN

1937-5239

Autores

Vincent Brown,

Tópico(s)

Race, History, and American Society

Resumo

ABOARD THE HUDIBRAS IN 1786, in the course of a harrowing journey from Africa to America, a popular woman died in slavery.Although she was "universally esteemed" among her fellow captives as an "oracle of literature," an "orator," and a "songstress," she is anonymous to historians because the sailor on the slave ship who described her death, the young William Butterworth, did not record her name.Yet he did note that her passing caused a minor political tumult when the crew herded the other enslaved women below decks before they could see the body of their fallen shipmate consigned to the water.This woman was no alienated isolate to be hurled over the side of the ship without ceremony.She had been, according to Butterworth, the "soul of sociality" when the women were on the quarterdeck.There she had knelt "nearly prostrate, with hands stretched forth and placed upon the deck, and her head resting on her hands."Then, "In order to render more easy the hours of her sisters in exile," the woman "would sing slow airs, of a pathetic nature, and recite such pieces as moved the passions; exciting joy or grief, pleasure or pain, as fancy or inclination led." 1 Around her the other women were arranged in concentric circles, with the innermost ring comprising the youngest girls, and the elderly on the perimeter-a fleeting, makeshift community amid the chaos of the slave trade.The first to die on that particular voyage, the woman was laid out on the deck while the sailors awaited flood tide to heave her overboard.The other women commenced a "loud, deep, and impressive" rite of mourning, often speaking softly to the corpse in the belief that the woman's spirit would hear and acknowledge their wish "to be remembered to their friends in the other country, when they should meet again."Before the ceremonies could reach a conclusion, the women and girls were ordered below, with the body left on the deck.Convinced that whites were cannibals and that the sailors "might begin to eat their dead favourite," the Africans began a vehement protest.Fearing a general insurrection, the captain let several of the women out of the hold and had the corpse lowered into the water in their presence, "with the observance of rather more decency in the manner of doing it, than generally appeared in the funeral of a slave."The protest subsided, the slaver eventually de-

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