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Blackface Abolition and the New Slave Narrative

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2014

Laura T. Murphy*
Affiliation:
Loyola University, New Orleans

Abstract

Since the 1990s, survivors of forced labor have been authoring first-person narratives that consciously and unconsciously reiterate the tropes and conventions of the nineteenth-century American slave narrative. These “new slave narratives” typically conform to the generic tendencies of the traditional slave narratives and serve similar activist purposes. Some of the most popular of the narratives have taken a particular political turn in the post-9/11 context, however, as neoliberal political agendas and anti-Muslim sentiments come to dominate the form and content of many of the African narratives that have been produced. This paper identifies a “blackface abolitionist” trend, in which the first-person testimonies of formerly enslaved Africans is co-opted by some politically motivated white American abolitionists to play a black masquerade, in which they adorn themselves with the suffering of enslaved Africans to thinly veil the self-exonerating and self-defensive crusade politics that motivate their engagement in anti-slavery work.

Type
General
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2014 

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References

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58 Indeed, some stalwarts of the Cold War era have reemerged as champions of the abolitionist cause. John Eibner of Christian Solidarity International began his career with the Keston Institute. The Institute for Religion and Democracy itself is presided over by Mark Tooley, a former CIA analyst who first became involved in the issue of religious persecution in the late 1980s when he wrote a critical report about religious funding of pro-Marxist organizations.

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