5/29/2023 0 Comments Douglass the heroic slave![]() ![]() Ecocriticism has failed so far to engage substantially with black cultures of nature. The trope's polemical function is especially apparent when it is contrasted retrospectively with The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave (1845), in which nature is a paralyzing wilderness rather than a theater of self-emancipation. This kind of radical republican pastoralism also shapes My Bondage, My Freedom (1855). Douglass fictionalized these ideas in his only novella, “The Heroic Slave” (1853), in which Madison Washington, leader of the 1841 Creole mutiny, declares his independence in a forest glade that functions as a chapel of natural rights. ![]() ![]() Democratic access to arable land was a precondition of real emancipation, which required reversing capitalism's expropriation of the commons. Douglass developed a protoenvironmentalist critique of capitalism's alienation of workers from the land, arguing that liberty achieved its truest expression when free people mixed their labor with nature in the pursuit of self-reliance. ![]() In the 1850s, Frederick Douglass set out to nurture emergent antislavery commitments within the most advanced political milieu of the antebellum decade, the Free Soil movement. ![]()
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