mddm: dialectics of master & slave
lorentzen-nicklaus
lorentzen-nicklaus at t-online.de
Wed Jul 3 03:05:18 CDT 2002
* "i heard a loud noise in the heavens and the spirit instantly appeared to me
and said the serpent was loosened, and christ had laid down the yoke he had
borne for the sins of man, and that i should take it on and fight against the
serpent, for the time was fast approaching when the first should be last and the
last should be first." --- nat turner ---
quoted after r. newman/m. sawyer: everybody say freedom. everything you need to
know about african-american history. new york 1996: plume/penguin, pp. 68f.
"what we know primarily about african-american slave revolts is that there were
many more of them, and they were much more important than the conventional
history books generally admit. the planter class played down slave rebellions
for two reasons: theoretically, because revolution contradicted their myth of
contented and docile slaves; and, pragmatically, because the masters were deeply
fearful that news of any one 'servile insurrection,' as they were called, might
inspire others." (65)
+ kfl ***
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