"The Mulatto" features a frame narrator, a
white man who functions as a sympathetic and tolerant sounding board
to whom Antoine, an old man still presumably a slave and the story's
embedded
narrator, freely recounts a harrowing narrative of his friend Georges,
a mulatto slave whose master is also his biological father.
3
It is Georges's master-father, Alfred, against whom Georges directs retributive
justice, killing him for allowing Georges's wife to be put to death
for
spurning Alfred's sexual advances. After poisoning Alfred's wife, Georges
beheads his master with an ax and then takes his own life upon discovering
that he has murdered his own father. Séjour's tragic narrative reveals
that the slave, like his master, has succumbed to evil as his depravity
stems from the corrupting effects of slavery.
Séjour's character, Antoine, a proud, imposing, elderly
slave raconteur, creates a narrative that exposes the psychological
tensions and physical violence brought about by the violation of the
humanity of black slaves and which affects slave owners as well as
their bondpersons. Antoine comfortably and confidently addresses a
nameless white listener,
an
individual
about whom he feels no rigid class or race barriers. Moreover, this man,
who serves as the frame narrator, gives us Antoine's story of Georges
apparently
as it was told to him, an uncensored, melodramatic tale of the tragedy
spawned by slavery, with his primary focus being on the victims of its
inhumanities. Antoine's story of Georges, which evokes sympathy
for the innocent black slave characters suffering under white oppression,
exemplifies racial melodrama, anticipating the form that Linda Williams
examines in
Playing the Race Card: Melodramas in Black and White,
From Uncle Tom to O. J. Simpson. Williams, who views
melodrama as typifying "popular American narrative . . . when it
seeks to engage with moral questions," notes that the "moral
legibility" of
actions within racial melodramas depends upon the representation of victimized
innocents who acquire virtue through suffering, a script intended
to evoke the social consciences and emotions of readers (12, 17).
In Antoine's
embedded narrative, the master Alfred is depicted as a vain, hideous
and merciless villain and the slaves whom he exploits physically and
emotionally—Laïsa, Georges's mother; Georges, his unacknowledged
son; and Zelia, Georges's wife—all become lost innocents,
unnecessary victims of the white man. As Antoine begins to talk, prefacing
the story, it becomes clear that he can vent his
discontent and outrage
blatantly and speak honestly to the authorial narrator, even to the extent
of adopting a cynically editorializing voice and using ideological discourse.
In his encounter with this white man, Antoine's effectiveness as
a functional mouthpiece and as a credible and reliable character is
not
diminished
by such
annoyances as dialect and and humiliatingly submissive behavior in his
encounter with this white man, especially for today's readers
who are knowledgeable of black portraiture in nineteenth-century American
white-authored texts such as John Pendleton Kennedy's
Swallow Barn (1832),
William Gilmore Simms's
The Yemassee (1835), and Joel Chandler
Harris's Uncle Remus tales. Antoine preserves his
dignity, consequently escaping reduction to a stereotype. After shaking
hands with the white man, who treats him with dignity, Antoine receives
a reaffirmation, an invitation to voice his stark, bitter recollections
of the dehumanizing effects of slavery. Antoine's monologue begins with
an undiluted tirade precipitated by his thoughts of the story he is
about
to tell
of the ill-fated Georges and his
master-father:
Antoine's sobering revelation foreshadows the story
of Georges, his mother, his wife, his master Alfred, and his master's
wife, establishing a
credible basis for the traumas both of slaves
who have experienced the victimization and abuses of bondage, and of
white masters depraved by unchecked power.
Published: 28 August 2007
© 2007 Ed Piacentino and
Southern
Spaces