Henry Bibb’s (Dis)claiming Family: Malinda as a Case Study of Black Women’s Symbolic Annihilation in Antebellum Literature

Existing scholarship on the autobiography Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb prioritizes Bibb’s masculinity and the impact of slavery on Black families, often overlooking the complex experiences of enslaved Black women such as Bibb’s first wife Malinda within such a narrative. Amy L...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Asmaa Alshehri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Pardubice 2024-12-01
Series:American and British Studies Annual
Subjects:
Online Access:https://absa.upce.cz/index.php/absa/article/view/2573
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850053854403493888
author Asmaa Alshehri
author_facet Asmaa Alshehri
author_sort Asmaa Alshehri
collection DOAJ
description Existing scholarship on the autobiography Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb prioritizes Bibb’s masculinity and the impact of slavery on Black families, often overlooking the complex experiences of enslaved Black women such as Bibb’s first wife Malinda within such a narrative. Amy Lewis’s article “Who’ll Speak for Malinda?” distinguishes itself by offering an alternative narrative focusing on Malinda’s experience. My paper builds on Lewis’s work by arguing that despite condemning slavery, Bibb’s narrative inadvertently perpetuates Malinda’s symbolic annihilation. Through a close reading of Bibb, my study attempts to reveal how enslaved women’s experiences are often omitted, trivialized, and condemned in American antebellum literature. By devoting particular attention to the “symbolic annihilation” of enslaved women, this paper responds to Amy Lewis’s call for alternate narratives and offers a critical shift in reading and interpreting depiction and omission of Black women in ex-enslaved narratives throughout nineteenth-century antebellum America. This approach has the potential to uncover the complex realities of Black women to offer valuable insights into their lives and experiences, thus challenging dominant interpretations of slave narratives.
format Article
id doaj-art-8ffa73bcdc5645bfadeb06e27df8c333
institution DOAJ
issn 1803-6058
2788-2233
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher University of Pardubice
record_format Article
series American and British Studies Annual
spelling doaj-art-8ffa73bcdc5645bfadeb06e27df8c3332025-08-20T02:52:26ZengUniversity of PardubiceAmerican and British Studies Annual1803-60582788-22332024-12-011710.46585/absa.2024.17.2573Henry Bibb’s (Dis)claiming Family: Malinda as a Case Study of Black Women’s Symbolic Annihilation in Antebellum LiteratureAsmaa Alshehri0University of Bisha Existing scholarship on the autobiography Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb prioritizes Bibb’s masculinity and the impact of slavery on Black families, often overlooking the complex experiences of enslaved Black women such as Bibb’s first wife Malinda within such a narrative. Amy Lewis’s article “Who’ll Speak for Malinda?” distinguishes itself by offering an alternative narrative focusing on Malinda’s experience. My paper builds on Lewis’s work by arguing that despite condemning slavery, Bibb’s narrative inadvertently perpetuates Malinda’s symbolic annihilation. Through a close reading of Bibb, my study attempts to reveal how enslaved women’s experiences are often omitted, trivialized, and condemned in American antebellum literature. By devoting particular attention to the “symbolic annihilation” of enslaved women, this paper responds to Amy Lewis’s call for alternate narratives and offers a critical shift in reading and interpreting depiction and omission of Black women in ex-enslaved narratives throughout nineteenth-century antebellum America. This approach has the potential to uncover the complex realities of Black women to offer valuable insights into their lives and experiences, thus challenging dominant interpretations of slave narratives. https://absa.upce.cz/index.php/absa/article/view/2573enslaved Black womensymbolic annihilationslave narrativesgender and slavery
spellingShingle Asmaa Alshehri
Henry Bibb’s (Dis)claiming Family: Malinda as a Case Study of Black Women’s Symbolic Annihilation in Antebellum Literature
American and British Studies Annual
enslaved Black women
symbolic annihilation
slave narratives
gender and slavery
title Henry Bibb’s (Dis)claiming Family: Malinda as a Case Study of Black Women’s Symbolic Annihilation in Antebellum Literature
title_full Henry Bibb’s (Dis)claiming Family: Malinda as a Case Study of Black Women’s Symbolic Annihilation in Antebellum Literature
title_fullStr Henry Bibb’s (Dis)claiming Family: Malinda as a Case Study of Black Women’s Symbolic Annihilation in Antebellum Literature
title_full_unstemmed Henry Bibb’s (Dis)claiming Family: Malinda as a Case Study of Black Women’s Symbolic Annihilation in Antebellum Literature
title_short Henry Bibb’s (Dis)claiming Family: Malinda as a Case Study of Black Women’s Symbolic Annihilation in Antebellum Literature
title_sort henry bibb s dis claiming family malinda as a case study of black women s symbolic annihilation in antebellum literature
topic enslaved Black women
symbolic annihilation
slave narratives
gender and slavery
url https://absa.upce.cz/index.php/absa/article/view/2573
work_keys_str_mv AT asmaaalshehri henrybibbsdisclaimingfamilymalindaasacasestudyofblackwomenssymbolicannihilationinantebellumliterature