Preface, introduction and notes by Henry Louis Gates, Jr., afterword by Barbara A. White. The first novel ever written by a black American, this fusion of the sentimental novel and the slave narrative, first published in 1859, was neglected until it recently became the subject of renewed scholarly interest. Recently the subject of a front page New York Times article, Our Nig traces the life of Frado, a Mulatto girl who grows up as an indentured servant to a white Massachusetts family, offering an enormous contribution to the study of black American literature and history.
Bought the book for a class reading,. I was surprised to find that I really enjoyed it. The dialect is enjoyable to read. The story is interesting and worth the buy.
Slave of Northern Abolitionist but free
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
This book was written by a woman who was supposed to be a free Black woman. In fact she was treated like a slave, a Black wage slave. She was oppressed by a family of who were Northern Abolitionists. Yet, she was treated like a slave. Succeeding generations of whites studying the book denied her and her class the ability to write such a book: they claimed the book had to have been written by a white person and that it was a novel, not real. Millions of Black women who have slaved in white kitchens and cleaning white homes during and since slavery have a spokesperson in Harriet E. Wilson. This book helps us understand not just to pity them, but to understanding their ability to fight back with their minds.
buy it with the Foreman & Pitts introduction
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
Though I currently have the 1983 edition with the introduction by Henry Louis Gates, Jr (whose name is in the introduction for almost every important Af-Am text in circulation, it seems), I plan on getting this latest edition. Until recently, biographical details on Wilson were limited. Indeed, they seemed to trail off soon after the publication of her book (a death certificate for her son six months after its printing has suggested to some that her call for support went unheard). This introduciton offers new and happier information, showing that Wilson lived a long life--in part as a successful lecturer on the Spiritualist circuit. In any edition this is a great book. Really, "great" isn't superlative enough to cover how important and interesting it is. But if you're going to buy it, get this edition.
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