Meditations on the paradoxes generated around the ending of western
slavery. In his tour-de-force ""Blind Memory"", Marcus Wood read
the visual archive of slavery in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century
America and Britain with a closeness and rigor that until then had
been applied only to the written texts of that epoch. ""Blind
Memory"" changed the way we look at everything from a Turner
seascape to a crude woodcut in a runaway slave advertisement. ""The
Horrible Gift of Freedom"" brings the same degree of rigor to an
analysis of the visual culture of Atlantic emancipation. Wood takes
a troubled and troubling look at the iconography inspired by the
abolition of slavery across the Atlantic diaspora. Why, he asks,
did imagery showing the very instant of the birth of black slave
freedom invariably personify Liberty as a white woman? Where did
the image of the enchained kneeling slave, ubiquitous in
abolitionist visual culture on both sides of the Atlantic, come
from? And, most important, why was freedom invariably depicted as a
gift from white people to black people? In order to assess what the
inheritance of emancipation imagery means now and to speculate
about where it may travel in the future, Wood spends the latter
parts of this book looking at the 2007 bicentenary of the 1807
Slave Trade Abolition Act. In this context a provocative range of
material is analyzed including commemorative postage stamps, museum
exhibits, street performances, religious ceremonies, political
protests, and popular film. By taking a new look at the role of the
visual arts in promoting the 'great emancipation swindle', Wood
brings into the open the manner in which the slave power and its
inheritors have single-mindedly focused on celebratory cultural
myths that function to diminish both white culpability and black
outrage. This book demands that the living lies developed around
the memory of the emancipation moment in Europe and America need to
be not only reassessed but demolished.
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