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Mass Market Paperback
First published January 1, 1964
When Martin Duberman, a historian by profession, composed the play in 1963 exclusively from historic documents ranging from the 17th century to contemporary sources, the Civil Rights Movement was gaining momentum and would be received with ever more violent reactions. The Voting Rights Act was not ratified until 1964 (and is once again under attack). Schools and universities in the Deep South had to be forced by the federal government to integrate which did not happen without fierce resistance. Remember Little Rock, the case of James Meredith and “Ole Miss” vis-a-vis Governor Wallace, and numerous cases of anonymous violence! Lorraine Hansberry had dealt with the housing issue in a Chicago suburb in her play, “A Raisin in the Sun.” The list of grievances is endless. The history of America is one that divides into the official myth of Manifest Destiny promoted by the white European settlers, and the shadow history of Native American, Black, Hispanic, and Chinese populations who were decimated, displaced, enslaved and exploited--and yet were the real source of American economic success!
Duberman’s play is a litany of real voices. Some express the manifold pain of slavery, the frustration of being systematically locked out of justice and education, of economic progress with decent wages, of habitable housing. Others are the loud voices of hatred and hypocrisy (notably Thomas Jefferson!) and the wily voices of patronizing rationalization (Woodrow Wilson). And there are some, such as John Brown and Nat Turner who rage and rebel against the system that destroys them. And then there is the memorable voice of Sojourner Truth whose thirteen children were all sold into slavery but who articulates, as no other, the double jeopardy of being black and a woman. The first voice in the play is that of a 17th century ship captain who describes in detail (and with empathy) the horrendous conditions in the bowels of a slave ship off the coast of Guinea en route to the Middle Passage.