Thursday, September 27, 2012

Crevecoeur vs. Knight



 

St. Jean de Crevecoeur
Sarah Kemble Knight
 


















         
           Writing almost 50 years before the accredited start of the abolitionist movement, St. Jean de Crevecoeur is perhaps one of the earliest writers to argue in defense of the slaves.  His passionate argument for emancipation and belief in racial equality greatly contrasts him with the obvious disgust and inferiority with which Sarah Kemble Knight viewed the slaves.

            In Knight's journal, she talked about her journey through Connecticut, and she outlined a few examples of "too great familiarity" between the white slave owners and their slaves.  One of her stories, about a farmer that was ordered to pay some money to his slave in recompense for a broken promise, subtly illustrates her disapproval of it.  More overtly, she expresses her disapproval of their "Indulgent" habits of "permitting [the slaves] to sit at Table and eat with them" (195).  Her belief in the inferiority of the slaves is perhaps best shown by her expression of horror that "into the dish goes the black hoof as freely as the white hand" (195).

            In complete contrast to that, Crevecoeur is not afraid to express his abhorrence of slavery, and goes so far as to state that "I hope the time draws near when [the slaves] will be all emancipated" (231).  He argues against the unfounded belief that slavery is right simply because it has always been around, and cites the slaves similar emotions as reasons for proving them equal to their white counterparts, saying that "those hearts in which such noble dispositions can grow, are then like ours, they are susceptible of every generous sentiment, of every useful motive of action" (232).  

            Most importantly, Crevecoeur views the slaves as human, as a people equal to his own instead of as a subservient race.  In the end, the main difference between him and Knight is not whether slavery is actually right, but whether the slaves are capable of being more than that, of whether they are naturally inferior or equal.       



Works Cited

Perkins, George, and Barbara Perkins.  The American Tradition in Literature.  12th ed. Vol. 1. Boston.  McGraw-Hill, 2009.  Print.