The Black Wanderer: Reading the Black Diaspora, Resistance, and Becoming in The History of Mary Prince in the Classroom

N. Carr
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Abstract

This paper examines The History of Mary Prince as a pedagogical tool for exploring complexities within the Black Diaspora. As Paul Gilroy’s articulations of the Black Atlantic inform my approach, Prince’s circuitous journey through the West Indies and England situates her process of becoming as one mired in longing and loss. Encouraging students to consider Prince as a wandering soul in search of not only freedom, but also solid familiar connections lays the foundation for merging her narrative with other enslaved Black people traversing countries and regions on ships against their will. Ample research material available on the survivors of the 1858 illegal ship enslaving Africans “Wanderer'' offer an opportunity to consider the constructions of Black Atlantic identities in which formerly enslaved Black people forge connections with each other while longing for a return to Africa. Additionally, Tessa Mars’ and Yinka Shonibare’s art forms a bridge for conceptualizing Black diasporic identities. Because the Caribbean is often perceived as a perpetual space of fantasy and play, The History of Mary Prince also challenges misconceptions of slavery as an institution peculiar to the United States. Of her brutal slaveholder sending her to another island, Prince expresses competing emotions, “At length he put me on board the sloop, and to my great joy he sent me away to Turk’s Island. I was not permitted to see my mother or father, or poor sisters and brothers, to say goodbye, though going away to a strange land, and might never see them again.” Encouraging students to consider Prince as a wandering soul in search of not only freedom but also solid familiar connections lays the groundwork for merging Prince’s narrative with other enslaved Black people traversing countries and regions on ships against their will. Ample research material available on the survivors of the 1858 illegal ship enslaving Africans “Wanderer” serves as my teaching tool for considering the constructions of Black Atlantic identities in which formerly enslaved Black people forge connections with each other while longing for a return to Africa. One of these survivors, Cilucängy, expressed in a letter his desire to return to his homeland: “I am bound for my old home if God be with me.” My essay also draws on student reactions to Yinka Shonibare’s art piece entitled “Wanderer.” Shonibare’s artwork forms the bridge for conceptualizing the more complex definitions of the Black Atlantic, Black Diaspora, and transnational identities.
《黑人流浪者:阅读玛丽·普林斯在课堂上的黑人流散、反抗和成长》
本文考察了玛丽王子的历史作为一个教学工具,探索黑人侨民的复杂性。正如保罗·吉尔罗伊(Paul Gilroy)对《黑大西洋》(Black Atlantic)的阐释为我提供了参考,普林斯(Prince)穿越西印度群岛和英格兰的迂回旅程,将她变成一个陷入渴望和失落的人的过程置于其中。鼓励学生将普林斯视为一个流浪的灵魂,不仅在寻找自由,而且在寻找坚实的熟悉的联系,这为将她的叙述与其他被奴役的黑人违背自己的意愿乘船穿越国家和地区奠定了基础。关于1858年非法奴役非洲人的船只“漫游者号”的幸存者的大量研究资料提供了一个考虑黑人大西洋身份建构的机会,在这种身份建构中,以前被奴役的黑人在渴望返回非洲的同时彼此建立了联系。此外,Tessa Mars和Yinka Shonibare的艺术构成了概念化黑人流散身份的桥梁。因为加勒比海经常被认为是一个永恒的幻想和玩耍的空间,《玛丽·普林斯的历史》也挑战了奴隶制是美国特有制度的误解。关于她残忍的奴隶主把她送到另一个岛屿,普林斯表达了矛盾的情绪,“最后他把我放在单桅帆船上,让我非常高兴的是,他把我送到了特克岛。我不被允许去见我的父母,或者可怜的兄弟姐妹,说再见,尽管我要去一个陌生的地方,也许再也见不到他们了。”鼓励学生将普林斯视为一个流浪的灵魂,不仅在寻找自由,而且在寻找坚实的熟悉的联系,这为将普林斯的叙述与其他被奴役的黑人违背自己的意愿穿越国家和地区奠定了基础。关于1858年非法奴役非洲人的船只“流浪者”号的幸存者的大量研究资料是我考虑黑人大西洋身份建构的教学工具,在这种身份建构中,以前被奴役的黑人在渴望返回非洲的同时彼此建立了联系。其中一位幸存者Cilucängy在一封信中表达了他想回到家乡的愿望:“如果上帝与我同在,我将回到我的老家。”我的文章也借鉴了学生对Yinka Shonibare的艺术作品《漫游者》的反应。Shonibare的艺术作品构成了概念化黑人大西洋、黑人散居和跨国身份等更复杂定义的桥梁。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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