Slave Old Man is a 1997 novella by Patrick Chamoiseau. This novel is a part of the literary Créolité movement, created by Francophone authors Patrick Chamoiseau, Jean Bernabé, and Raphaël Confiant during the 1980s. In 2018, an English translation by Linda Coverdale was published and won the 2019 Best Translated Book Award.
Slave Old Man | |
Author: | Patrick Chamoiseau |
Translator: | Linda Coverdale |
Language: | French and French Creole |
Genre: | Historical Fiction |
Pub Date: | 1997 |
English Pub Date: | 2018 |
Media Type: | Print (Paperback) |
Pages: | 176 |
Publisher: | The New Press (English version) |
Country: | France |
The narrator claims to have transcribed an oral history of an old slave man who escapes a sugarcane plantation on the island of Martinique. The old slave is docile and obedient, but when he locks eyes with his master's mastiff in its kennel, his need for freedom is unleashed. He leaves the plantation, running through the night and losing all feeling and sense of self in the Great Woods as he is pursued by the master and his mastiff. At daybreak, the old man covers his eyes from the harsh sun with a blindfold. As he journeys through the woods, he feels as though he is one with nature, but fear and exhaustion soon provoke hallucinations. As he removes his blindfold, he recovers his immense spirit and discovers his will for independence. On the course of his journey, the old man encounters a snake, survives a watery sinkhole, and fights off crabs. Tired of running from the relentless mastiff, the old man opts to turn and fight instead. The dog falls into a spring and the old man breaks his leg. The old slave dies and the novel concludes with an archaeologist's examination of the old slave man's bones.
The novel is divided into seven chapters with names that reference Nature: Matter, Alive, Waters, Lunar, Solar, The Stone, and The Bones. Each of these chapters also begins with an epigraph from the Martiniquan writer Édouard Glissant. As the book progresses, the narrative shifts from third to the first person voice of the old man. Several sections show the perspective of the master and of the mastiff. Notable characteristics of the author's writing style include terse, choppy sentences, detailed metaphors, and uneven chapter length. The story is told without the use of dialogue. Internal monologue exhibits emotional tension.
The protagonist, the old slave, is not named within the text. He is, however, referenced by the nickname "Fafa" because of his job of making syrup. Most of his life has been spent enslaved on the plantation. Because of his obedience and wisdom he is respected among the slaves and by the master, but he does not participate in the slaves' social traditions. Nor does he exhibit emotion. The protagonist's repressed spirit finds its will released when he, as a runaway slave, attempts to escape the plantation.
The plantation owner is also not named. He maintains order on the plantation and relentlessly pursues escapees. The master is baffled by the old slave man's change of character.
A mastiff was purchased by the plantation owner at the seaport. The ferocious dog had been transported from Gehenna to maintain order on the slave ship. The trusted old slave man had driven his master to the seaport on the day of its purchase. The beast has captured every runaway slave thus far. The slaves feared being attacked by the dog so much that they stopped attempting to escape
167 slaves and two overseers live and work on the plantation. Slaves had tried to escape before, but the mastiff had always caught them. The master has a wife and four children.
Slave Old Man takes place during the period of French colonization on the island of Martinique. Slaves were imported to operate the lucrative sugar plantations of the Lesser Antilles islands. This period began in 1636 following a decree by King Louis XIII which dictated the importation and usage of a workforce consisting of African slaves to replace the native Carib population.[1] As the French continued to expand and colonize what became known as the French West Indies, slave labor was used extensively to fuel expansion and economic growth. Following the French Revolution of 1848, slavery on the island of Martinique was abolished after the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation of 1848, which brought freedom to slaves throughout the entire French West Indies.[2]
The historical fiction novella was originally published in 1997 by Gallimard in cooperation with the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Cultural Services of the French Embassy in the United States.[12]
The English translation from the original French and Creole was published in 2018 by The New Press. Linda Coverdale blended the original French and Creole with the English translation throughout the text as hyphenated phrases between the original text and the translation or as substitutes for the English word.