cover image Harriet Tubman: The Life and the Life Stories

Harriet Tubman: The Life and the Life Stories

Jean McMahon Humez. University of Wisconsin Press, $45 (488pp) ISBN 978-0-299-19120-7

Conductor of the Underground Railroad for eight years, Harriet Tubman famously boasted that she could say what most conductors couldn't:""I never run my train off the track and I never lost a passenger."" The quote fits with the popular image of Tubman as the courageous, inspired""Moses of Her People,"" yet Humez, a professor of women's studies and scholar of African-American spiritual autobiography, argues that the edifice of Tubman iconography has concealed the woman herself. Humez has assembled a trove of primary source documents--letters, diaries, memorials, speeches, articles, meeting minutes and testimonies--that create a more intimate portrait of Tubman. But instead of interpreting the rich materials she has collected, Humez offers a biography of Tubman and then includes a scholarly article asserting that since Tubman was illiterate, and her stories and correspondence have been recorded by others,""such texts cannot be read at face value"" and must be understood to have undergone at least minimal changes from the author's original statements. Although Humez's prose lacks narrative flair, she aptly places Tubman in a broad historical context, documenting her relations to John Brown, Sojourner Truth, Abraham Lincoln, Frederic Douglass, Northern abolitionists and the nascent women's movement. The book is at its best in the last two primary-source sections. Through Tubman's documented words and the observations of others,""Aunt Harriet"" emerges as an even more charismatic figure than American history has allowed: profoundly spiritual, irreverent, witty, wise, impoverished and ultimately neglected by the Union she defended.