The history of Mary Prince : a West Indian slave

by Mary Prince

Other authorsMoira Ferguson
Paper Book, 1997

Status

Available

Publication

Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, c1997.

Description

Mary Prince's narrative was one of the earliest to reveal the ugly truths about slavery in the West Indies to an English reading public that was largely unaware of its atrocities. Prince was born in Bermuda to an enslaved family. She spent her early life in harsh conditions and was eventually sold to John Adams Wood of Antigua, working as his domestic servant. She joined the Moravian Church, where she learned to read, and married Daniel James, a former slave who had bought his freedom. In 1828 she traveled to England with the Woods family and after protracted efforts by abolitionists was able to leave their control. Encouraged by her new employer, Thomas Pringle, who also served as her editor, Prince wrote and published her book in 1831 to wide acclaim. While eighteenth-century slave narratives largely focused on Christian spiritual journeys and religious redemption, Prince was part of a growing trend of abolitionist writers focused on the injustice of slavery. Her work stands alongside better-known narratives such as A Narrative of the Adventures and Escape of Moses Roper and Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. Adding to its importance, few early women's slave narratives exist.… (more)

Rating

½ (37 ratings; 3.5)

User reviews

LibraryThing member zeborah
One of those books that is what it says on the box. Hard to tell how much edited, though the editor claims as little as possible. Either way, Mary Prince tells her life vividly and economically; though she barely lingers over any one of the torments laid upon her and her fellow slaves, the reader
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gains a clear picture of each and of the whole they make up. The backmatter gives the political context of British tolerance of overseas slavery at the time, and of the very piecemeal approach to remedying it.
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Language

Original publication date

1831

Physical description

vii, 173 p.; 21 cm

ISBN

0472084100 / 9780472084104
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