Description
Book SynopsisConceived as a literary form to aggressively publicize the abolitionist cause in the United States, the African American slave narrative remains a powerful and illuminating demonstration of America''s dark history. Yet the genre''s impact extended far beyond the borders of the U.S. The American Slave Narrative and the Victorian Novel investigates the shaping influence of writings by Frederick Douglass, Harriet Jacobs, and other former slaves on British fiction in the years between the Abolition Act and the Emancipation Proclamation. Julia Sun-Joo Lee argues that novelists such as Charlotte Bronte, Elizabeth Gaskell, and Charles Dickens integrated into their works generic elements of the slave narrative-from the emphasis on literacy as a tool of liberation, to the teleological journey from slavery to freedom, to the ethics of resistance over submission. It contends that Victorian novelists used these tropes in an attempt to access the slave narrative''s paradigm of resistance, illuminat
Trade ReviewLee's book is valuable not only for demonstrating how much Victorian novels have in common with American slave narratives, but for beginning to address the questions this kinship raises...This book breaks new ground, and later critics will build upon it to deepen our understanding of the relationship between the slave narrative and the Victorian novel. * Victorian Studies *
Table of ContentsIntroduction. The American Slave Narrative and the Victorian Novel ; Chapter One. The Slave Narrative of Jane Eyre ; Chapter Two. Slaves and Brothers in Pendennis ; Chapter Three. Female Slave Narratives: "The Grey Woman" and My Lady Ludlow ; Chapter Four. The Return of the "Unnative": North and South ; Chapter Five. Fugitive Plots in Great Expectations ; Epilogue. The Plot Against England: The Dynamiter ; Works Cited