Status Updates From Contending Forces: A Romanc...
Contending Forces: A Romance Illustrative of Negro Life North and South (The ^ASchomburg Library of Nineteenth-Century Black Women Writers) by
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Jesse
is on page 150 of 211
The American Colored League hearing is where the aim of this novel became apparent to me and why there has been such an emphasis on mixed race heritage and miscegenation. Hopkins sees these people as bearing the psychosexual trauma of being the living legacy of decades of slavery and sexual violence.
— Nov 22, 2024 05:20PM
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Jesse
is on page 104 of 211
Part of what is nice about this book is how it places in fiction so much of the problems plaguing African Americans in the northern United States that, yeah, I vaguely remember from history books, but which hits a bit different in this fictionalized account. Hopkins also tries to shine a light on the complex sectional politics and notions of “blackness” that lead to the self-destruction of Pan-Africa.
— Nov 22, 2024 12:54PM
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Jesse
is on page 50 of 211
I ran into a cognitive speedbump because Hopkins is purposefully evasive in directly connecting the Smith family to the escaped Jesse Montfort, I assume as a way to thematically underline his attempted break from his past. It’s doubly confusing when his… grandchildren??? are presented with what appears to be the Montfort last name, but I assume that this is, like, their second middle name.
— Nov 22, 2024 07:53AM
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Jesse
is on page 50 of 211
This covers a lot of ground, from how the English were abolishing slavery to how race relations were managed in the Bahamas to how someone like Charles Montfort could expect to be treated in the south. The answer, based on rules that Hopkins outlines about miscegenation and fomenting dissatisfaction among the slaves and other weird slavery-era Southernisms, is you can expect to die.
— Nov 20, 2024 08:40PM
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