cover image Remembering Slavery: African Americans Talk about Their Personal Experiences of Slavery and Emancipation [With 2 60-Minute Cassettes]

Remembering Slavery: African Americans Talk about Their Personal Experiences of Slavery and Emancipation [With 2 60-Minute Cassettes]

. New Press, $49.95 (0pp) ISBN 978-1-56584-425-4

Two projects begun independently and presented together here provide chilling witness to slavery's persistent legacies. Transcripts of 124 former slaves interviewed in the 1920s and 1930s are accompanied by recently restored recorded interviews that have languished in the Library of Congress since 1941. Historian Berlin, founding director of the Freedmen and Southern Society Project at the University of Maryland, is a master of allowing the natural drama of history to unfold. The tapes particularly are riveting--perhaps especially for those seeking their roots in Southern slavery. Until the modern civil rights movement, Berlin notes, historians' ""struggle over slavery"" was considered ""too important to be left to the [blacks] who experienced it,"" but their experience has increasingly been coming to light as more archival material is unearthed and made available. Still, some seams are apparent. The original transcribers of the print interviews (nine appear both in print and on cassette) made numerous and idiosyncratic editorial interventions that at times can read, as Berlin notes, like ""minstrel-speak."" Actor James Earl Jones and dancer Debbie Allen reading selections from the interviews on portions of the tape are not nearly as credible or moving as the voices of former slaves. Those wonderfully present voices describe family life, work ethic and recreational patterns, religious ethos and resistance in answer to questions posed in often unmistakably condescending terms by white interviewers. This project will enrich every American home and classroom. 40 b&w photos not seen by PW. (Oct.)