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Chapter 12. The confluence of fiction, historical memory and oral history

The crises of identity and traumatic memories in Ama: A Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade
  • Emmanuel Saboro and Ruth Abeduwah Quansah
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Abstract

The slave trade enterprise in Africa and its memory continue to remain one of the emotive subjects within the collective consciousness of people across time and space. This chapter revisits the belated trauma of the Atlantic slave trade in Manu Herbstein’s neo-slave narrative, Ama: A Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade. Drawing on the intersection between fiction, historical memory, and oral history, the chapter explores the crises of identity and the trauma of both individual and communal dislocation. The chapter argues that Manu Herbstein’s text complicates our understanding of not only the tragedy of enslavement but also of the complexities of an internal diaspora resulting from the dislocation of a people. The chapter also pays critical attention to the alienation created through the renaming of enslaved people, language barriers, and the dissolution of families.

Abstract

The slave trade enterprise in Africa and its memory continue to remain one of the emotive subjects within the collective consciousness of people across time and space. This chapter revisits the belated trauma of the Atlantic slave trade in Manu Herbstein’s neo-slave narrative, Ama: A Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade. Drawing on the intersection between fiction, historical memory, and oral history, the chapter explores the crises of identity and the trauma of both individual and communal dislocation. The chapter argues that Manu Herbstein’s text complicates our understanding of not only the tragedy of enslavement but also of the complexities of an internal diaspora resulting from the dislocation of a people. The chapter also pays critical attention to the alienation created through the renaming of enslaved people, language barriers, and the dissolution of families.

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Chapter 1. Introduction 1
  4. Part One. Counter-Memories and memories of resistance
  5. Chapter 2. “Some slave is rotting in this manorial lake” 24
  6. Chapter 3. Transforming the colonial scene of writing 40
  7. Chapter 4. Commemorating slavery during apartheid 54
  8. Chapter 5. Gothic tropes and displacements of slave rebellion in Matthew G. Lewis’s Journal of a West India Proprietor (1834) 70
  9. Chapter 6. The Memorial ACTe in Guadeloupe 88
  10. Part Two. The body as material archive
  11. Chapter 7. Bio-graphies in the broad sense 112
  12. Chapter 8. Looking at black bodies in pain 130
  13. Chapter 9. Performing the neurotic 148
  14. Part Three. Fictionality as history writing
  15. Chapter 10. Reimagining slavery from a twenty-first-century perspective 168
  16. Chapter 11. Contemporary Scandinavian colonial-historical fiction 188
  17. Chapter 12. The confluence of fiction, historical memory and oral history 214
  18. Chapter 13. Cinematic slavery 229
  19. Part Four. The cultural bricolage of history
  20. Chapter 14. Carrying memory and making meaning 254
  21. Chapter 15. Contradicting histories, memories, fictions 270
  22. Chapter 16. The cultural memory of Roma slavery in Europe 295
  23. Part Five. Authorship
  24. Chapter 17. “From Mary’s own lips” 314
  25. Chapter 18. Self-expression by black Antillean women 330
  26. Chapter 19. Creating a new abolitionist literature for children 349
  27. Part Six. Creative approaches to the memorialization of slavery
  28. Chapter 20. Hair and body fashion identity narratives in The Return of the Slaves exhibition 368
  29. Chapter 21. Filling the blanks in history 379
  30. Chapter 22. A people made of mud 392
  31. Volume 2. Biographical descriptions 409
  32. Name index 415
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