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Slavery, Abolition and Emancipation:
Writings in the British Romantic period (Eight vols.)
Kitson, P.J.
and Lee, D. (eds.)
Pickering & Chatto (1999).
ISBN 1851965130
Reviewed by: Dr
John Marriott
Senior Lecturer in History
University of East London
It would seem that this weighty collection is part
of an even larger project. Much of the preparatory work was carried out
by Peter Kitson and his colleagues in the recent Romanticism and Colonialism.
Writing and empire, 1780 - 1830, which he also co-edited. (1)
Contributors here sought to extend debates on the Romantic movement by
exploring a previously neglected aspect, namely, its specific relationship
with colonialism. The Romantic period, they rightly argue, was one punctuated
by momentous events. The loss of the Americas, the French Revolution,
the abolition of slavery, and the turn to the east signalled what many
have seen as the transition from the first to the second British Empire.
Under such circumstances, it comes as no surprise to discover that the
work of most writers within or on the fringes of the Romantic canon displayed
a concern to understand hitherto unfamiliar cultures. Thus figures from
Blake to Burke, Coleridge to Clarkson sought to represent individuals
and societies found in corners of the empire, most especially in the vital
areas of India and the Caribbean.
Furthermore, it was during the Romantic period that
a fundamental shift occurred in the discourse of race. In the writings
of people such as Edward Long, Charles White and Anthony Benezet, the
idea of race was transformed from a system of arbitrary to natural signs,
which were employed to arrange humanity into a hierarchical order at the
foot of which stood the African. Even the great anti-slavery campaigner
Thomas Clarkson could not avoid privileging the European in the perceived
civilised order.
Slavery, Abolition and Emancipation focuses
these concerns by exploring the unprecedented output of literature in
its various forms that appeared in this period on the subject of slavery.
How, the editors ask, can we explain the coincidence of the rise of antislavery
sentiment, the peak of the slave trade and the intensification of Romanticism?
How was it that at a time when much of the literature recorded the destruction
of the enslaved African, British poets and novelists valorised an expansive
selfhood through national and personal liberty? Answers are sought in
a series of texts organised thematically - but not consistently - by genre
or topic in eight volumes, each of which is edited and introduced by a
member, or members of a team.
Volume 1 contains a general introduction to the anthology
by Debbie Lee, and a collection edited by Sukdev Sandu and David Dabydeen
of virtually the entire corpus of known black writings on slavery published
in Britain during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. Here
the familiar texts of Mary Prince, Olaudah Equiano and Ignatius Sancho
are supplemented by fragmentary writings of forgotten figures such as
Julius Soubise and James Harris. Volume 2 edited by Kitson brings together
extracts or complete texts from writings on the abolition debate, including
amongst opponents James Ramsay, Thomas Clarkson and William Wilberforce,
and supporters William Beckford and Bryan Edwards. The debate on emancipation
is covered in Volume 3 edited by Lee, which comprises five extensive texts
published over 1823 - 26. The next three volumes are devoted to genre.
Volume 4 edited by Alan Richardson includes a wide selection of verse
representing the diverse, contradictory and complex response to slavery
among well-known poets such as Blake, Cowper and Burns, and the lesser-known
including Thomas Pringle and James Boswell. Drama is the subject of Volume
5. Edited by Jeffrey Cox it includes the work of playwrights such as Isaac
Bickerstaff and John Fawcett in an attempt to challenge conventionally
wisdom that drama was a genre that had no engagement with antislavery
sentiment. To the contrary, the stage offered a highly suitable site for
the depiction of the global scale of slavery. Volume 6, edited by Srivinas
Aravamudan, covers fiction. Excerpts from the writings of Sterne, William
Earle and others are used to demonstrate the significance of the form
in projecting utopian visions of a future without slavery while simultaneously
depicting the slave condition in stereotypical and sentimentalised ways.
We return to themes with medicine edited by Alan Bewell in Volume 7, and
theories of race edited by Kitson in the final volume. Here are represented
the growing bodies of scientific, ethnological, geographical, epidemiological
and anatomical research that sought to comprehend through classification
the human condition, and so establish familiar racial hierarchies. Writers
such as Thomas Clarkson, Edward Long, William Jones and James Prichard,
it is argued, provided a ready source of ideas for the more imaginative
appropriation of slaves and their experience.
Few could fail to be impressed by the 3,000 pages
of writings, all of which are reproduced in facsimile, whenever possible
in their entirety. The collection makes available many texts made familiar
by frequent reference in secondary works, but much less frequent study
of the originals. Each text has a brief and generally informative introduction,
and is valuably annotated by extensive notes. I can only hope that these
attractive volumes will encourage historians to recognise more fully the
centrality of slavery to modern British experience rather than seeing
it as a regrettable side issue, and so redress the damaging consequences
of the longstanding historical amnesia on this question.
Permit me, however, to sound one or two critical
notes. I found the putative links between abolition and Romanticism unconvincing.
There can be little doubt that the period witnessed a momentous shift
in human consciousness - what David Brion Davis has described in his magisterial
Slavery and Human Progress from 'progressive enslavement to 'progressive
emancipation'. (2) Under such circumstances
figures within the Romantic movement were almost inevitably engaged by
the moral and philosophic debates that resounded throughout the west.
Abolitionism and Romanticism then could both be viewed as products of
the 'changing sensibility that marked late eighteenth-century culture',
and it is a matter of demonstrating their interplay. (3)
The difficulties in exploring these links, however,
are not addressed; indeed, most of the introductions to individual volumes
make no reference to Romanticism. Perhaps they felt it impossible to embrace
the sheer variety of authors within such a framework. How could the likes
of Phillis Wheatley, Robert Wedderburn, Thomas Clarkson, Edmund Burke,
Hannah More, William Wilberforce, Lord Kames, William Cobbett and Sir
William Jones be thought as part of the same movement? The problem is
compounded by a failure to examine in detail the precise ways in which
key Romantic figures engaged with slavery beyond their role as mere contributors
to antislavery literature. To do so would have required more thought on
the imaginative articulation of themes such as selfhood, progress, unity
and redemption (4) to the experience
of slavery and its abolition.
I remain sceptical, therefore, about the extent to
which these writings can be framed by Romanticism, even in its widest
sense. I am more persuaded by the argument
that they 'defy over-arching theories', and the suggestion that 'imaginative
texts influenced political, medical, religious and anatomical texts, and
that these in turn shaped imaginative literature'. (5)
This more modest claim better describes the ambition of the collection
(in this respect its texts are in rather than of the period known
to us as the Romantic age). And although it may not be particularly original
or startling, the precept is one that can and does open up some neglected
lines of inquiry.
In these terms the collection works well, sometimes
exceptionally so. Take, for example, the volume devoted to fictional writings
edited by Srinivas Aravamudan. In the excellent introduction Aravamudan
goes beyond the sterile debates that have tended to feature in critical
studies of the extent to which, say, Jane Austen's Mansfield Park
expresses antislavery sentiments. Isolated references to the source of
Bertram's wealth in Antigua, and speculations on the allusions to Mansfield
in the Somerset case, help little in understanding how imaginative literature
came to be seen as a valuable vehicle with which to explore the moral
and philosophic issues surrounding slavery. Nor can a study of radicalised
stereotypes seen out of context reveal adequately ways in which literature
sought to represent the slave. Instead, he argues, it is necessary to
examine the complex modes adopted by writers in their attempts to apprehend
the condition and experience of slavery.
Most fiction proved inadequate to the task, treating
slaves as 'objects of analysis, pathos, and amelioration rather than as
full-blooded sociological and moral beings of the sort encountered in
staple versions of novelistic realism'. (6)
Thus sentimentalism, which until the end of the eighteenth century dominated
antislavery fiction and poetry, engendered tear-jerking responses to depictions
of individual slaves rather than outrage at the system, so sustaining
an implicit conservatism. The genre eventually declined as it lapsed into
bathetic romance, to be replaced by didactic fiction which, although open
to the charge of sociological inadequacy, did have imaginative potential,
and presented opportunities for moulding opinion. In this light, the literature
on slavery represented in this volume can be seen to possess all those
ambivalent and contradictory powers characteristic of fictional interventions
more generally.
Similar misgivings about artistic potential are aired
by Sukdev Sandhu and David Dabydeen in their fine introduction to the
volume on black writers. Confronting previous studies that have claimed
optimistically to unearth in these texts evidence of 'disruptive strategies,
counter-hegemonic discourses and acts of epistemic violence', they point
to the manifold structural and artistic inadequacies in the writers' attempts
to express black sensibility. While not denying the considerable achievements
of black authors in publishing under difficult circumstances, Sandhu and
Dabydeen thus provide a refreshing and necessary corrective to the well-intentioned
but zealous radicalism that has hindered a better understanding of the
historical significance of these works. The sad but telling conclusion
is that none of these texts advanced the cause of antislavery.
To say that such high levels of scholarship are not
sustained throughout the anthology is not to be unduly critical for an
enterprise of this nature is bound to be uneven. Some of the other volumes
could not quite match this standard. Despite meticulous efforts in tracing
the histories of obscure plays, I did find, for example, that Cox's introduction
to the volume on drama a less than powerful challenge to previous claims
that there was no drama of antislavery. 'Black' characters had featured
on the English stage since medieval times, and so it must have come as
no surprise to the eighteenth-century theatre-going public to encounter
plays that included dramatic representations of slaves. Such plays, however,
in tending to present slavery in the abstract as a universal condition
masked its historical realities, and the role of England in its perpetuation.
Many spoke rather more about the conventions of representing blacks than
slavery itself.
And yet we are told little about this tradition,
or the constraints under which playwrights and managers operated. Most
of the plays enjoyed only short runs. Mrs Weddell's Incle and Yarico
was never performed, while George Colman's musical drama Inkle and
Yarico had as many performances as Hamlet in the last quarter of the
eighteenth century, but it not included in the collection. Nor are any
stage adaptations of Aphra Behn's Oroonoko, arguably one of the
most popular tales of the eighteenth century, and whose influence can
be detected in virtually all plays depicting the noble slave. Finally,
I was disappointed by the lack of historical awareness. The plays included
cover a period from 1742 to 1816 - one that witnessed profound changes
in both antislavery sentiment and the English stage. Did none of this
impact on the dramatic forms themselves, or the ways in which they were
received?
To take one more example, Kitson's volume on theories
of race is in many respects a worthy inclusion in the anthology. Many
of the texts selected for inclusion were influential in contemporary thinking
about the nature of the human order and racial taxonomies. Thus we have
extracts from Edward Long's infamous History of Jamaica. Drawing
upon the notion of the great chain of being as evidenced in earlier work
of the French enlightenment natural historian Buffon, Long employed a
pseudo-scientific, polygenist approach to argue that Negroes were a separate
species, occupying an intermediate position between humans and apes. This
particularly vicious fantasy was to be taken up in future decades by Charles
White and Josiah Knott, so laying the foundation for the scientific racism
of the nineteenth century.
Johann Blumenbach was also indebted to Buffon, but
in contrast to Long maintained that humans were part of a single species.
This did not prevent differentiation, however. Relying on detailed measurements
of physical characteristics, most notably those of the skull, Blumenbach
was able to separate humans into five racial varieties, at the apex of
which stood the Caucasian, thereby establishing a typology that is still
commonly in use. Although he continued to argue for the full humanity
of other groups, the notion of a nexus between race and anatomy was open
to abuse by racial theorists, the logic of which came to be realised with
horrific consequences in the twentieth century. Sir William Jones is a
more surprising inclusion, but given his influential work on relationships
between race and language entirely defensible. For Jones also classified
the human race, identifying the common origin of Indo-Europeans. James
Prichard later combined the physical anthropology of Blumenbach with linguistic
work of Jones to produce a cultural anthropology, on the basis of which
the tradition of British ethnography was built.
Kitson's introduction is measured, striking a nice
balance between the content of this literature and its historical context.
And yet the critical questions on its relationship to slavery and Romanticism
are not addressed. If anything, the thrust of the argument is that any
relationship is difficult to detect. As he points out, Long's racial theory
did not influence pro-slavery writers, the majority of whom denied that
racial inferiority was an issue. Furthermore, racial theorists such as
White and William Lawrence rejected slavery. The links with Romanticism
are even more tenuous. While it is evident that writers such as Coleridge
and Blake knew these works, in no sense were they used to construct racial
hierarchies. Overall, few Romantics 'engaged directly with these works
of natural philosophy'. (7)
'Much work still needs to be done on the ways in which race theory of
the period relates to the artistic productions of the time,' Kitson concludes.
(8) Well, yes, but we might
have hoped that such an anthology would begin to answer these questions.
If natural philosophy and a nascent cultural anthropology
were not the principal sources of racial imagery in this period, then
what were? Christian cosmology and travel writings must figure prominently.
From the early modern period when a global consciousness was forged Europe
came to know 'the Other' through travel and exploration. The accounts
published, fantastic though they might have been, were informed by older
discourses subordinating the heathen, the savage, and the black to the
white, the Christian, and the civilised. Evangelical and travel writings
on Africa, India and the Caribbean, which were much more widely read,
cannot be fully understood unless as part of this paradigm. To have included
some in the anthology would therefore have strengthened it as a whole,
and made some of the arguments more telling.
These reservations aside, the eight volumes in this
collection represent an ambitious and enterprising project to make available
key texts from one of the most significant episodes in British history.
If, as I believe, they now make it virtually impossible both to ignore
slavery in thinking about the emergence of Britain as a world power, and
to deny that a consciousness of it entered into the very fabric of the
nation's culture, then their publication is vindicated. Indeed, our thanks
are due to everyone involved, including the publishers whose reputation
for such bold ventures will be enhanced.
January 2002
Notes:
1. Kitson,
P.J. And Fulford, T. (eds.), Romanticism and Colonialism. Writing and
empire, 1780 - 1830, Cambridge University Press (1998).
2. David Brion
Davis, Slavery and Human Progress, New York, Oxford University
Press (1986), p. xvii.
3. Slavery,
Abolition and Emancipation, Vol. 2, p. xxv.
4. See the
classic study of M.H. Abrams, Natural Supernaturalism. Tradition and
revolution in Romantic literature, New York, Norton (1971).
5. Slavery,
Abolition and Emancipation, Vol. 1, p. xxii.
6. Ibid,
Vol. 6, p. xi.
7. Ibid,
Vol. 8, p. xxv.
8. Ibid,
Vol. 8, p. xxvi.
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