About the Book
The Negro Character in American Literature BY JOHN HERBERT NELSON, PH. IX Associate Professor of quot English m The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Department of Journalism Press 1926 PREFATORY NOTE Several years ago, in looking quot about for a thesis subject which would be worth investigating in itself and at the same time lead to a survey of the whole field of American literature, I was attracted to certain American fictional types, particularly to the negro per haps the best portrayed of them all. His literary history seemed worth recording, partly because he arrived at his present estate only after a long and interesting journey, and partly because it would, incidentally, throw much light on our native drama, balladry, and fiction. Accordingly, I chose the subject and the result stands substantially embodied in the following study, originally a disser tation submitted for the doctorate at Cornell University, in Septem ber, 1923. Most of the chapters have been condensed, the whole has been rewritten and reorganized, and a bibliography which would now include more than twelve hundred titles and an ap pendix on negro dialect have been omitted. It is with pleasure that I acknowledge here my obligations to several friends and colleagues Professor M. W. Sampson, Pro fessor J. Q. Adams, and Professor William Strunk, of Cornell Uni versity Professor G. D. Sanders, of the University of Arizona Professor S. L. Whitcomb, Professor F. H. Hodder, and Professor W. S. Johnson, of the University of Kansas. Dr. Walter H. French, of Cornell, has offered many pertinent criticisms of the manuscript and Professor F, C. Prescott, of Cornell, under whose guidance the work was originally prosecuted, has from the beginning been both helpful and encouraging. J. H. N. Lawrence, Kansas Sept. 25, 1926 CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I INTRODUCTION 7 II THE NEGRO IN COLONIAL LITERATURE 16 III THE NEGRO CHARACTER IN SERIOUS LITERATURE BEFORE THE CIVIL WAR 23 IV THE SENTIMENTAL HERO IN CHAINS THE NEGRO IN ANTISLAVERY VERSE 49 V THE HEROIC FUGITIVE 60 VI UNCLE TOM AND His COMPEERS A. INTRODUCTORY 69 B. MRS. STOWE 73 C THE SUPPORTERS OF MRS. STOWE 81 . D. PROSLAVERY FICTION 86 VII RUSSELL, PAGE, AND THE BEGINNINGS OF THE NEW ERA 93 VIII UNCLE REMUS ARRIVES 107 IX THE CONTEMPORARIES AND SUCCESSORS OF HARRIS 120 INDEX 139 The Negro Character in American Literature CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION The negro has been known to literature for many ages and in many lands. Homer s age knew him, as well as our own. Among the earliest Egyptian inscriptions are records of a black race which dwelt beyond the headwaters of the Nile. The ancient Greeks, the Romans, the Arabs, the Persians, the Spaniards, the French, the Germans, the English-speaking nations have all made the negro, in one way or another, a theme in song and story. Most of all, how ever, he has come to be associated with the New World, in par ticular with the United States. Here, where for so long he labored in bondage and where has subsequently come his greatest oppor tunity for development and cultural growth, he has ever been an important and unsolved problem for society, and in recent decades, at least, a human type highly attractive to writers of fiction. Neither sociologists nor novelists could afford to neglect him if they would. The ancient world called him an Ethiopian, and at times con fused him with the Arab but that this ancient world knew hisactual physical appearance is proved beyond dispute by Herodotus s well known description, as well as by extant sketches illustrating the myth of the pygmies and the cranes. The Greeks had much to say about the African. Homer sang of Memnon, Prince of the Ethiopians Cepheus and his daughter Andromeda were Ethio pians and if a somewhat fanatical German student of the subject be correct which seems unlikely, Agamemnon himself belonged to a race having kinky hair. 1 Pindar, Euripides, Hippocrates, Plu tarch, Lucian, and Diogenes Laertius all mention the African...