
 |
An Overview Genres of Southern
Literature by Genre
Lucinda MacKethan, North Carolina State University
Essay Sections:
The South’s Literatures of Slavery:
(Slave Narratives, Plantation Fiction, Civil Rights Epics, and Neo-Slave
Narratives)
The American institution of chattel slavery began with
the first importation of captured Africans in the
1600s 1620s and did not end
until the South's Confederacy's surrender in the Civil War in 1865. By the second decade of the
nineteenth century, slavery's legal practice was confined mostly within
the plantation South. The system of national and state laws that were
developed to organize and control this racially defined, captive labor
force was augmented by systems of social codes that regulated how white slaveowners, African-American
slave owners, African American slaves, and non-slaveowning whites behaved
across race, class, and gender lines. Outside
the slaveholding region, northerners Northerners developed their own
understanding of these interactions, and the literature that was written
on both sides of the Mason-Dixon line began to be shaped as responses
across ideological as well as geographical sectional borders.
White southern novelists of the southern states began in the 1820s to develop the
plantation setting as an idealized literary world populated by characters
who developed into types, each expected to convey a set of personal qualities—virtues
or vices—as well as to act according to fixed mannerisms of dress,
gesture, and language. Gender codes also developed for plantation writing
as both northern and southern women entered, and finally took over, the
marketplace for popular social fiction. Often the plantation literature
by men was considered to belong to the genre of the historical romance
that used Sir Walter Scott's works as a model, while women's writing came
to be viewed under the heading of "sentimental" or "domestic"
fiction. In the plantation fiction by writers of either gender, slavery
itself was seldom foregrounded in any obvious way. However, if we examine
the class constructions on which such fiction’s plots are based, we see
that the planter aristocracy was the center of social organization for
both the "male" historical romance and the "female"
domestic novel. Thus at At least implicitly, and often directly, these works of
both genders were promoting model slave societies founded upon the plantation
ideal of patriarchy. The white belles and matriarchs enshrined in domestic
plantation Arcadies and the cavaliers whose horses are curried and armaments
carried by "sable body servants" are iconic endorsements of
a social system and emerging nationalism operating on the backs of usually
silent, often invisible black "dependents."
While white southern writers in the South were looking to the plantation to provide
the most fertile ground for fictions representing their socioeconomic
ideals, slave ex-slave, African American writers during the same period used
the plantation scheme very differently in developing what might be seen
as America's first indigenous literature: the North American slave narrative.
An ironic factor in the production of these narratives can be noted in
the generic title "Fugitive Slave Narrative" now often given
to these works. Southern-born narrators, telling firsthand of their experience
of slavery, could become authors only by escaping both the region South and the
condition. Yet in In their narratives they had to return to the world that enslaved
them, and were called upon to provide accurate reproductions of both the
places and the experiences contained within the past they had fled. This
genre was tightly bound within conventions designed to accomplish clear propaganda anti-slavery
goals (as indeed, although less
openly, plantation fiction was also bound). bound to legitimize the world
the slaveholders had made). The "formula" of the slave narrative
was something that the slave ex-slave writer understood only too well, but today well. Today
we can acknowledge some features of the genre that
reflect represent the slave ex-slave
writers' chafing against the genre rules laid down by white
abolitionist agenda, as well as their attending to
them.
Slavery generated northern writing as much as southern, and the North's
most eloquent literary writer on the subject, Harriet Beecher Stowe, stimulated
the production of plantation fiction in the South, especially in the form
of a specialized sub-genre designed specifically to answer her attack
on the institution slavery in Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852). Stowe drew upon specific
details and situations that she took directly from several slave narratives,
but she also found her own form, combining epic, realism, sentiment, and
jeremiad to reach the largest reading audience that a novel had ever produced
in America. In response, "Anti-Tom" novels by the dozens modeled
their plots and characters on Stowe's creations, reproducing a format
that remained effective even after the Civil War decided the questions
she had raised.
Uncle Tom's Cabin provided for writers one a hundred years later
some key features, in detail and scope, that African American writers
in particular drew upon to relate slavery to the message of the Civil
Rights Era in the 1960s and 1970s. The epic historical novel, exemplified
by Alex Haley's Roots , traced the civil rights freedom struggle back to its
historical beginnings in the middle passage and the cotton and rice plantations
of the Old South. Like Stowe's novel, these works offer emotional dramatizations
of slave life within a sweeping episodic structure designed to convey
both a sense of past history and present urgency.
The slave narrative form, genre, like Stowe's novel, has continued for over
a century to generate fiction that draws upon its distinctive formal features.
Beginning in the 1970s, writers as disparate as Ishmael Reed and William
Styron, Octavia Butler and Charles Johnson, have brought the first-person
slave narrator's voice into dialogue with modern practices of racial discrimination
through what is
now often called the genre of "neo-slave narrative."
The categories enumerated below reflect the great variety of literature
produced out of the slave fugitive-slave and slaveowning South, beginning chronologically within
the period of 1820 to 1865 but and extending down to the present. In each
genre we see how persistently the region's South's identity, within and beyond
its literature, was formed by and remains tied to its "peculiar institution." institution"
and its moment of attempted nationalism.
The Slave Narrative:
The North American Slave Narrative began as a rhetorical
form commandeered by the abolitionist movements in both Great Britain
and America. Over 100 a hundred of these stories of escape/pursuit/finding
freedom, published between 1760 and 1865, have been identified. * The rhetorical
situation was well-defined: freed slaves or those who had escaped southern their
owners were asked to tell of their experiences within bondage, emphasizing
trials and tribulations, the cruelty of masters, the depths of their suffering,
and the strength of their desire to be free. Slave narratives were potent
weapons in the abolition arsenal, especially with the rise of organized
abolition societies in the 1830s. No other rhetorical design had as much
power as these eyewitness accounts to move opinion against the institution
of slavery. The slave had endured what others could only imagine, and
in his/her search for freedom struck a deep chord of sympathy in readers
who saw themselves as guardians of the ideal of liberty for "all
men."
Accuracy in the slave narrative was paramount. The few fictionalized accounts,
when discovered, provoked accusations from the South South's
defenders that all of these publications were suspect. Thus the
factual accounts almost always included extensive prefatory endorsements
from well-regarded white sponsors. The slave narrator him or herself was
encouraged to leave inner revelations, such as expressions of self-discovery
and individuality, in the background and to foreground the verifiable
facts of representative slave experience, without adornment.
Today we recognize in slave narratives both their didactic function as
evidence in the abolitionists' cause and their artistic and expressive
functions for the slave author whose identity as writer was especially
ambiguous. The slaves' claims to humanity, to authority, to self-determination
were enacted in taking up pen and paper, yet the tale to be told was pressed
into a format over which they had little control, conventional format, and the generic plot
was one that returned them to the
status of chattel, denied the very humanity
that they had fled in order to prove. chattel. "You have seen how a man was made a slave,"
claimed Frederick Douglass in the 1845 Narrative of the Life of Frederick
Douglass, an American Slave that has become the paradigmatic
work for the genre. "You shall see how a slave was made a man."
In the best of the narratives, such as Douglass's, the writer finds ways,
through imagery, style, and voicing, to affirm selfhood and creativity
within the prescriptions but often against the expectations of readers
of the time.
Most of these narratives were produced during the first great era of American
literature (1830-1860), side by side with such classics of American self-fashioning
as Thoreau's Walden, Whitman's Leaves of Grass, and
Melville's Moby-Dick. Once Stowe had published Uncle Tom's
Cabin, Douglass's Douglass (in his 1855 My Bondage and My Freedom)
and Harriet Jacobs's Jacobs (in her 1861 Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl)
adopted novelistic techniques such as extensive dialogue between "characters"
and thematic chapter headings. One especially intriguing example of the
novelization of the slave narrative has been uncovered by Henry Louis
Gates. In 2002 he re-published a novel by a slave woman most probably named
Hannah Crafts, entitled "The Bondwoman's Narrative," first published,
again probably, in New Jersey sometime between 1853 and 1861. The narrative
is named fiction and uses many fictional elements (including "borrowings"
from Charles Dickens). Gates has pieced together fascinating speculations
concerning the African American woman who wrote the fictional account
of a slave woman's life and her final attainment of freedom.
*The The definitive
study of this genre is William L. Andrews's To Tell a Free Story:
The First Century of Afro-American Autobiography,
1760-1865. 1760-1865.
He chose for inclusion in his study "all the forms of first-person
retrospective prose narrative that came from the mouths or pens of American
blacks between 1760 and 1865."
Plantation Fictions:
The Historical Romance and the Domestic Novel.
Plantation fiction as a rubric for southern literature has often included,
even emphasized, literature written by local color writers after the Civil
War. Yet we will be considering that grouping in a different light because
its use of the "trappings" of the plantation served purposes
related to the Reconstruction South's racial agenda, and not the institutionalization
of slavery itself. The plantation fiction described below belongs to the
antebellum period and was ideologically motivated to render a vision of
southern society as a slavocracy in all its relations. Considerations
of southern men and women’s fiction of this period have traditionally
run on very different tracks. The novels of the early nineteenth century
were often labeled "romances" by the men who wrote them (George
Tucker, John Pendleton Kennedy, William A. Caruthers, and William Gilmore Simms).
These works usually dealt with very specific historical moments
(Bacon's Rebellion, the Revolutionary War) and stressed what has become
known as "the cavalier myth" which touted the heroics of aristocratic
types. The plantation was most often a backdrop, but a crucial one—a
credential indicating the nobility of class that paralleled the nobility
of spirit that the heroic male character must exemplify.
In both the mid-nineteenth century North and South, women writers were
not long in entering the book-writing business. Their works almost always
bear the labels "domestic" or "sentimental," and those
labels have usually been pejorative. The labeling of women’s fiction as
"domestic" reflects the idea that women belonged in the home,
that politics and public life were inappropriate for women, and that their
natural "sphere" was to inculcate, in their children, the morals
needed for gendered roles in society. True to form, southern white women’s writing
in the plantation South created stories of women that centered on "the
marriage plot," turning belles into mistresses of the house who know
and do their duty. Still it is important to see, in southern white women's
antebellum fiction, the political value of the plantation as a social
organization involving the ideal of slavery as a "domestic institution."
Caroline
Hentz, E.D.E.N. Southworth, Caroline
Gilman, and Augusta Jane
Evans Wilson were interested in southern white upper-class women's experience within
this ideal of planter society, just as the male romancers were interested
in southern upper-class masculinity within the same paradigm.
Thus the The fictional worlds
of both white southern men and women writers privileged the lives of slaveholders,
even if plantation settings and slaves are seldom center-stage. Caroline
Gilman's Recollections of a Southern Matron (1837) and John P.
Kennedy's Swallow Barn (1832) are the most explicit of this genre
in exploring directly the workings of the plantation as a theme. In these
novels the plantation is the ideal home, where slaves and slaveholders
are part of one patriarchally ordered family that combines economic and
social responsibilities. African American writers Frederick Douglass,
in The Heroic Slave (1853), William Wells Brown in Clotel
or or The President's Daughter: A Narrative of Slave Life in the United
States (1853), and Frances Watkins in fictional narratives such
as "The Slave Mother: A Tale of the Ohio" (1856) rebuke the
genre and gender positions of plantation literature in dramatic ways,
appropriating virtues associated with the cavalier hero and the plantation
belle for African American characters who actively work against or who
are victims of the slave system.
The Anti-Tom Novel. Before the last installment of Harriet
Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin appeared in The National
Era in 1851, and before the ink was dry on the book version that
came out in March of 1852, Southerners southerners were sharpening their pens into
knives. The South found no shortage of writers of both genders eager to
refute Stowe's villainizing villainization of slaveowners slave owners and her romanticized "white
washing" romantization of
slaves. Dozens of works of fiction and epic narrative poems were published
in counter-attack before the end of the Civil War. For many years after
the war had settled the book's major question, white southerners continued
to try to undo the damage to their social image that her novel had inflicted.
John P. Kennedy and William Gilmore Simms, the South's two most respected well known
romancers, might be said to have anticipated Stowe more than directly
confronted her. Kennedy brought out a second edition of his popular plantation
work, Swallow Barn, in 1852, adding a chapter in which the kindly
master details his plan to make slavery, a necessary evil even to him,
more equitable for the slave. William Gilmore Simms's Woodcraft
was published (originally as The Sword and the Distaff) only
a few months after Uncle Tom's Cabin's debut in book form, but
it contains some discussions that are clear refutations of Stowe's views.
Set at the end of the Revolutionary War, Woodcraft embellishes
the career of a colorful character, army officer Captain Porgy, to develop
a plot hinging in part on the master's close relationship to his manservant
(notably named Tom).
In 1854 appeared two of the most significant novels to directly
take on Stowe's arguments: Thomas B. Thorpe's The Master's House
and Caroline Hentz's The Planter’s Planter's
Northern Bride . Two of the most popular and sentimental as well
as unrealistic Anti-Tom novels were Mary Eastman's Aunt Phillis's
Cabin (1852) and Maria McIntosh's The Lofty and the Lowly
(1853), which contained the telling sub-title, "Good in All and None All
Good." Slaves in the Anti-Tom works are generally the happy, singing,
childlike stereotypes that Stowe herself helped to cement, yet sometimes,
as in The Planter's Northern Bride, there are portraits of evil,
rebellious servants who plot insurrection and murder. The vision that
these novels promote is of a South in which slaves and masters enjoy a
mutually supportive, familial bond that is only severed by the ignorant
or greedy machinations of abolitionists. The North's capitalistic labor
structure is indicted, while the master is cast as the enlightened descendant
of the southern heroes of the Revolution, and thus the guarantor
of the rights of (land- (land and slave-owning)
slave owning) man. None of the refutations
had anywhere near the persuasive impact of Uncle Tom's Cabin,
at least not before the twentieth century arrived. .
Yet the huge popularity of an early twentieth century southern novelist,
Thomas Dixon, who followed Stowe's footsteps as a master propagandist,
reflects an ironic, even tragic, shift in public will. Thomas Dixon made
use of many of Stowe's effective fictional and rhetorical strategies in
his white supremacist novels, works such as The Clansman (1905)
and
The Leopard's Spots (1902)
that found wide audiences, especially when D.W. Griffith transformed them
into the landmark film
Birth of a Nation in 1915.
The Civil Rights Epic:
Of the many literary works that grew out of the civil
rights movement of the 1960s and '70s, 70s,
one interesting group is the epic novels that return to slavery for plots
and characters in order to give the struggle for African American political
freedom and socioeconomic justice an extensive historical dimension. African
American writers Alex Haley Margaret Walker
in Roots Jubilee (1976),
(1965), Ernest Gaines in The Autobiography
of Miss Jane Pittman (1971), and Margaret Walker Alex
Haley in Jubilee Roots
(1965) (1976) published sweeping historical
novels that covered the Civil Rights freedom
struggle across generations beginning with a realistic portrayal of their
heroes' early lives in slavery. A forerunner to these is Arna Bontemps's
1936 novel, Black Thunder, which drew upon Gabriel Prosser's
abortive slave rebellion near Richmond in 1800. Toni Morrison's Song
of Solomon (1977) and Beloved (1987), as well as Gloria
Naylor's Mama Day (1988) and Julie Dash’s Daughters of the
Dust (1992), continue the Civil Rights Era interrogation of the American
promises of freedom and equality when they implicitly reference contemporary
situations of struggle within plots of slave experience. William Styron
argued that his novel The Confessions of Nat Turner (1967)
grew out of his own personal wrestling with civil rights issues. As a narrative cast
within the first-person voice of the slave Nat Turner, Styron drew, as
did the writers considered below, upon the slave narrative form, although
his novel shows much less awareness of the original slave narratives than
do other neo-slave narrative fiction writers.
The Neo-Slave Novel:
Neo-Slave Narratives are first-person fictional novels
that adopt the form of the pre-Civil War, first-person retrospective slave
narratives. Like the civil rights epics, they have grown primarily
as a response of African American writers to the 1960s political struggles
for equal opportunity. Some of these novels are set completely within
the historical period of slavery, while others use features of science
fiction time travel (Octavia Butler's Kindred, 1979) or magic
realism techniques allowing fantastic, often anachronistic plot elements
(Charles Johnson's Oxherding Tale, 1982; Ishmael Reed's Flight
to Canada, 1976). The neo-slave narratives are usually very self-conscious
in their imaginative borrowings of the actual slave autobiographies, which
constitute a kind of parent form for all African American literature.
Ishmael Reed's Flight to Canada, for instance, directly references
the narrative of Josiah Henson, one of the sources that Stowe appropriated
for Uncle Tom's Cabin. William Styron's Confessions of Nat
Turner (1967) draws from the wording of the slave revolt leader's
Confession, taken from and published by his lawyer after the
1831 revolt. Styron's work, a white writer's appropriation and fictionalizing
of a major African American figure's life, was very controversial. African
American writers and critics objected strongly to Styron's lack of research
into the actualities of slave life and more particularly to his distortions
of the known facts of Turner's life. The Confessions of Nat Turner
heightened the awareness both within and beyond the African American community
of the need for well-grounded efforts to recover and interpret the slave's
experience in history and literature. Sherley Anne Williams's novel Dessa
Rose (1986), in response to what she called Styron's "travesty,"
took up this challenge with a plot that follows the life of a woman slave
who, after an unsuccessful slave rebellion, is able to escape and take
charge of her life. The neo-slave narrative celebrates the forceful witness
of the fugitive slaves, particularly their will to freedom and their courage
in escaping and confronting oppressive, racist institutions, and applies
their perspectives to contemporary African American life.
Essay Sections:
|
 |