The Confession of Latrese Mugumbo
Posted: Tue Mar 18, 2003 9:59 pm
WOW!!! Slammr has produced an incredibly powerful story. For those who read the Archive for the castration-count, it ranks very high on the scale. For those who read for powerful ideas, this may be the best yet.
By reversing a familiar story, one that most of the Americans here read in high school, Slammr has brought home the power that was contained in the original when it was new. This IS The Confession of Nat Turner with all the impact that the original would have conveyed at the time it was written in 1831. Slammr has made the necessary changes to SLAM home to the Archive reader just what the original would have said to a White slave owner in the American South.
Its a powerful condemnation of mans inhumanity to man. AND, its a great story for the Archive.
The description of the slave raid could easily be a slightly edited version of many contemporary accounts that were published describing raids in Africa. Although the slave boys who were castrated in the African raids were destined either for the Moslem lands of North Africa and the Middle East or were for domestic use guarding the harems of some of the African kings.
Castration was rare, but certainly not unknown in the American colonies, or later in the United States. There are records of Colonial congregations debating whether a truly Christian slave owner could castrate his slaves. Different congregations came to different answers. There are ample descriptions of judicial castrations of slaves in states ranging from Massachusetts to South Carolina. One South Carolina slave rebellion resulting in 27 castrations. There are descriptions of eunuch house slaves in New Orleans at least, though they probably existed elsewhere as well. In my research, I have come across an ad for a runaway slave that stated that he could be recognized because he "had been recently castrated and the wound not yet healed."
Slammr brings the period home to us by setting it in our future. Great job!
By reversing a familiar story, one that most of the Americans here read in high school, Slammr has brought home the power that was contained in the original when it was new. This IS The Confession of Nat Turner with all the impact that the original would have conveyed at the time it was written in 1831. Slammr has made the necessary changes to SLAM home to the Archive reader just what the original would have said to a White slave owner in the American South.
Its a powerful condemnation of mans inhumanity to man. AND, its a great story for the Archive.
The description of the slave raid could easily be a slightly edited version of many contemporary accounts that were published describing raids in Africa. Although the slave boys who were castrated in the African raids were destined either for the Moslem lands of North Africa and the Middle East or were for domestic use guarding the harems of some of the African kings.
Castration was rare, but certainly not unknown in the American colonies, or later in the United States. There are records of Colonial congregations debating whether a truly Christian slave owner could castrate his slaves. Different congregations came to different answers. There are ample descriptions of judicial castrations of slaves in states ranging from Massachusetts to South Carolina. One South Carolina slave rebellion resulting in 27 castrations. There are descriptions of eunuch house slaves in New Orleans at least, though they probably existed elsewhere as well. In my research, I have come across an ad for a runaway slave that stated that he could be recognized because he "had been recently castrated and the wound not yet healed."
Slammr brings the period home to us by setting it in our future. Great job!