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Staging the Amistad collects in print for the first time plays
about the Amistad slave revolt by three of Sierra Leone's most
influential playwrights of the latter decades of the twentieth
century: Charlie Haffner, Yulisa Amadu "Pat" Maddy, and Raymond E.
D. de'Souza George. Until the late 1980s, when the first of these
plays was performed, the 1839 shipboard slave rebellion and the
return of its victors to their homes in what is modern-day Sierra
Leone had been an unrecognized chapter in the country's history.
The plays recast the tale of heroism, survival, and resistance to
tyranny as a distinctly Sierra Leonean story, emphasizing the
agency of its African protagonists. For this reason, Haffner,
Maddy, and de'Souza George counterbalance the better-known American
representations of the rebellion, which center on American
characters and American political and cultural concerns. The first
public performances of these plays constituted a watershed moment.
Written and staged immediately before and after the start of Sierra
Leone's decade-long conflict, they brought the Amistad rebellion to
public consciousness. Furthermore, their turn to a uniquely Sierra
Leonean history of heroic resistance to tyranny highlights the
persistent faith in nation-state nationalism and the dreams of
decolonization.
Staging the Amistad collects in print for the first time plays
about the Amistad slave revolt by three of Sierra Leone’s most
influential playwrights of the latter decades of the twentieth
century: Charlie Haffner, Yulisa Amadu “Pat” Maddy, and Raymond
E. D. de’Souza George. Until the late 1980s, when the first of
these plays was performed, the 1839 shipboard slave rebellion and
the return of its victors to their homes in what is modern-day
Sierra Leone had been an unrecognized chapter in the country’s
history. The plays recast the tale of heroism, survival, and
resistance to tyranny as a distinctly Sierra Leonean story,
emphasizing the agency of its African protagonists. For this
reason, Haffner, Maddy, and de’Souza George counterbalance the
better-known American representations of the rebellion, which
center on American characters and American political and cultural
concerns. The first public performances of these plays constituted
a watershed moment. Written and staged immediately before and after
the start of Sierra Leone’s decade-long conflict, they brought
the Amistad rebellion to public consciousness. Furthermore, their
turn to a uniquely Sierra Leonean history of heroic resistance to
tyranny highlights the persistent faith in nation-state nationalism
and the dreams of decolonization.
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