Bob Corbett's Reading Notes on Cooper Book
THE PERSPECTIVE OF A BLACK AMERICAN ON SLAVERY AND THE FRENCH
REVOLUTION
by Anna Julia Cooper
Frances Richardson Keller (translator)
Keller's introduction:
p. 5. 66 years old when she presented and defended this doctoral thesis
at the U. Of Paris in 1925.
p. 8. Cooper born a slave in 1858. Her father was probably the white
master. She lived 105 years.
p. 13 From Cooper on effects of slavery in black/white relations. (about
white southerner)
"For two hundred and fifty years he trained to his hand a people whom
he made absolutely his own, in body, mind and sensibility. He so
insinuated differences and distinctions among them, that their personal
attachment for him was stronger than for their own brethren and fellow
sufferers. He made it a crime for two of three of them to be gathered
together in Christ's name without a white man's supervision, and a felony
for one to teach them to read even the Word of Life; and yet they would
defend his interest with their life blood; his smile was their happiness,
a pat on the shoulder from him their reward. The slightest differences
among themselves in condition, circumstances, opportunities, became
barriers of jealousy and disunion. He sowed his blood broadcast among
them, then pitted mulatto against plantation slave, even the slave of one
clan against like slave of another clan; till, wholly oblivious of their
ability for mutual succor and defense, all became centers of myriad
systems of repellant forces, having but one sentiment in common, and that
their entire subjection to that master hand." p. 102 Anna Julia Cooper, A
VOICE FROM THE SOUTH.
text itself:
p. 33 mortality rates of slaves ( slave slavery ) were 3 times their
birth rate. this kept a steady stream of new slaves coming.
For each 1 imported slave probably 4 died en-route.