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==As a literary genre== The development of slave narratives from autobiographical accounts to modern fictional works led to the establishment of slave narratives as a literary [[genre]]. This large rubric of this so-called "captivity literature" includes more generally "any account of the life, or a major portion of the life, of a [[fugitive slaves|fugitive]] or [[freedmen|former slave]], either written or orally related by the slave himself or herself".<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/tserve/freedom/1609-1865/essays/slavenarrative.htm|title=How to Read a Slave Narrative|last=Andrews|first=William}}</ref> Whereas the first narratives told the stories of fugitive or freed slaves in a time of racial prejudice, they further developed into retrospective fictional novels and extended their influence until common days. Not only maintaining the memory and capturing the historical truth transmitted in these accounts, but slave narratives were primarily the tool for fugitive or former slaves to state their independence in the 19th century, and carry on and conserve authentic and true historical facts from a first-person perspective. They go further than just autobiographies, and are moreover "a source for reconstructing historical experience".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-by-era/literature-and-language-arts/essays/slave-narratives-genre-and-source|title=The Slave Narratives: A Genre and a Source {{!}} The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History|date=August 6, 2012|website=www.gilderlehrman.org|language=en|access-date=March 8, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170317055140/https://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-by-era/literature-and-language-arts/essays/slave-narratives-genre-and-source|archive-date=March 17, 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref> The freed slaves that wrote the narratives are considered as historians, since "memory and history come together".<ref>{{cite book|title=The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative|last=John|first=Ernest|date=January 1, 2014|publisher=Oxford Univ. Press|isbn=9780199731480|oclc=881290138}}</ref> These accounts link elements of the slave's personal life and destiny with key historical phenomena, such as the [[American Civil War]] and the [[Underground Railroad]]. In simple, yet powerful storylines, slave narratives follow in general a plot common to all of them: starting from the initial situation, the slave in his master's home, the protagonist escapes in the wilderness and narrates the struggle for survival and recognition throughout his uncertain journey to freedom.<ref>{{cite book |last=Frances |first=Smith Foster |url=https://archive.org/details/witnessingslaver0000fost_u1p4 |title=Witnessing slavery : the development of ante-bellum slave narratives |date=January 1, 1994 |publisher=University of Wisconsin law school |isbn=9780299142148 |oclc=800963917 |url-access=registration}}</ref> After all, these narratives were written retrospectively by freed slaves and/or their abolitionist advocate, hence the focus on the transformation from the dehumanized slave to the self-emancipated free man. This change often entailed literacy as a means to overcome captivity, as the case of [[Frederick Douglass]] highlights. The narratives are very graphic to the extent as extensive accounts of e.g. whipping, abuse and rape of enslaved women are exposed in detail (see [[Treatment of slaves in the United States]]). The denunciation of the slave owners, in particular their cruelty and hypocrisy, is a recurring theme in slave narratives, and in some examples denounced the double standards (e.g. in Douglass's narrative, his slave owner Hopkins is a very religious, but also brutal man). According to James Olney, a typical outline looks the following way: {{Blockquote| A. An engraved portrait, signed by the narrator.{{pb}} B. A title page that includes the claim, as an integral part of the title, "Written by Himself" (or some close variant: "Written from a statement of Facts Made by Himself"; or "Written by a Friend, as Related to Him by Brother Jones"; etc.){{pb}} C. A handful of testimonials and/or one or more prefaces or introductions written either by a white abolitionist friend of the narrator (William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips) or by a white amanuensis/editor/author actually responsible for the text (John Greenleaf Whittier, David Wilson, Louis Alexis Chamerovzow), in the course of which preface the reader is told that the narrative is a "plain, unvarnished tale" and that naught "has been set down in malice, nothing exaggerated, nothing drawn from the imagination"βindeed, the tale, it is claimed, understates the horrors of slavery.{{pb}} D. A poetic epigraph, by preference from William Cowper.{{pb}} E. The actual narrative: # a first sentence beginning, "I was born ... ," then specifying a place but not a date of birth; # a sketchy account of parentage, often involving a white father; # description of a cruel master, mistress, or overseer, details of first observed whipping and numerous subsequent whippings, with women very frequently the victims; # an account of one extraordinarily strong, hardworking slave often "pure African"-who, because there is no reason for it, refuses to be whipped; # record of the barriers raised against slave literacy and the overwhelming difficulties encountered in learning to read and write; # description of a "Christian" slaveholder (often of one such dying in terror) and the accompanying claim that "Christian" slaveholders are invariably worse than those professing no religion; # description of the amounts and kinds of food and clothing given to slaves, the work required of them, the pattern of a day, a week, a year; # account of a slave auction, of families being separated and destroyed, of distraught mothers clinging to their children as they are torn from them, of slave coffles being driven South; # description of patrols, of failed attempt(s) to escape, of pursuit by men and dogs; # description of successful attempt(s) to escape, lying by during the day, travelling by night guided by the North Star, reception in a free state by Quakers who offer a lavish breakfast and much genial thee/thou conversation; # taking of a new last name (frequently one suggested by a white abolitionist) to accord with new social identity as a free man, but retention of first name as a mark of continuity of individual identity; # reflections on slavery.{{pb}} F. An appendix or appendices composed of documentary material bills of sale, details of purchase from slavery, newspaper items-, further reflections on slavery, sermons, anti-slavery speeches, poems, appeals to the reader for funds and moral support in the battle against slavery.<ref name=olney>{{cite journal|title='I Was Born': Slave Narratives, Their Status as Autobiography and as Literature|last=Olney|first=James|journal=[[Callaloo (journal)|Callaloo]]|volume=20|issue = 20|year=1984|pages=46β73|jstor = 2930678|doi=10.2307/2930678}}</ref>}} There is no consensus about what exact type of literature slave narratives are, whether they can be considered as a proper genre, comprised in the large category [[captivity narrative]], or are [[Autobiography|autobiographies]], [[memoir]]s, [[testimonial]]s, or [[novel]]s; nonetheless, they play a big part in keeping up the memory of slavery and in approaching a topic that was considered as a taboo for a long time β especially since many denied and still deny the existence of slavery.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://slavenorth.com/denial.htm|title=Slavery Denial|website=slavenorth.com|access-date=March 16, 2017}}</ref> Given the participation in the 19th century of abolitionist editors (at least in the United States), influential early 20th-century historians, such as [[Ulrich B. Phillips]] in 1929, suggested that, as a class, "their authenticity was doubtful". These doubts have been criticized following better academic research of these narratives, since the late 20th-century historians have more often validated the accounts of slaves about their own experiences.<ref name="Nichols">{{cite journal|year=1971|title=Slave Narratives: Dismissed Evidence in the Writing of Southern History|journal=Phylon|volume=32|issue=4|pages=403β409|jstor=274066|last1=Nichols|first1=William W.|doi=10.2307/274066}}</ref>
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