THE VOICES OF THE AFRO-AMERICAN IN LITERATURE: A STUDY ON SLAVERY Femmy Dahlan I Abstract: Literary work could portray both the life from the real world and also functions as a media to voice the injustice experienced by certain society. Slavery in America can be seen through three literary works written by Afro-American writers. These three writers describe how slavery had destroyed the lives of the slaves in the Southern part of America. The slaves were treated cruelly by the owners which bring bitterness to them. The lives of the slaves at that timewasfoll of torture both physically and mentally. Key words: Afro-American literature. injustice. slavery INTRODUCTION The flfst people of African descent were bought to Jamestown, Vrrginia, by.a Dutch man to be sold to the English settlers. Records show that they came as indentured servants rather than slaves and they were free to buy land after their term of services just like any other white indentured servants. Eventually. they were forced into legal slavery in 1661 and another law the following year decided the fate of children born in the colony would be bound or free according to the status of the mother. The effects of both economic and racial attitudes had driven those English settlers to practice slavery in the New World though England itself had no tradition of slavery. Buying the Negroes for labor force in the plantation turned to be more profitable than employing them as indentured Femmy Dahlan, S.~., M.Hum is is a full- time lecturer of the Faculty of Humanities, Bung Hatta University, Padang. 14 Celt, Volume 8, Number I, July 2008: 1-15 from home and family members to suffer greatly. The whites had regarded them as someone who can be treated like livestock in the most inhumane ways. The brutal actions of the whites towards the black left a scar in the heart of the black American, a scar that also become the dark history of America. Though the Southern states were making profits from the plantation through the forced labor of the blacks for hundreds of years, nevertheless, their own conduct leads to their own destruction. The luxurious living they were fond of ended through the disagreement between the southern states and the northern states over slavery. The four years of civil war tum the southern white lives upside down just like the shattered lives of millions of slaves in their hands. Because ofthe institution of slavery both whites and blacks suffered as a consequence. It can be deduced that the black American writers use literature as a mean to criticize as well as to protest the cruel treatments received from the whites during slavery. Through these three works their generation will realized the kind oflives their ancestors had lived. As for the whites the three works will remind them of their brutality. It can also be concluded that the three works serve as a mental evidence of the American history. BIBLIOGRAPHY Bergman, Peter M. The Chronological History of the Negro in America. New York: The New American Library, 1969. Davie, Maurice R. Negroes in American SOciety. USA: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1949. Equiano, Olaudah. "The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African". Black Writers of America: A Comprehensive Anthology. Ed. Richard Barksdale and Kenneth Kinnamon. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1972:7-38. Haley, Alex. Roots. New York: Dell Publishing, 1976. Hymowitz, Carol and Michaele Weissman. A History of Women in America. New York: Bantam Books, Inc., 1981. Logan, Rayford. The Negro in the United States: A Brief History. USA: D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc. 1957. F. Dalila", The Voices of the Afro-American Literature 15 Roper, Moses. "A Narrative of the Adventures and Escape of Moses Roper, from Slavery. Black" Writers of America: A Comprehensive Anthology. Ed. Richard Barksdale and Keneth Kinnamon. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1972:210-218. Tindal, George B and David E. Shi. 1989. America: A Narrative History. USA: w.w. Norton and Company, Inc. 1989. Wright, Donald R. African Americans in the Colonial Era: From African Origins Through the American Revolution.lllionis: Harlan Davidson, Inc., 1990. __ . African Americans in the Early Republic: 1789-1835. Illionis: Harlan Davidson, Inc., 1993. logo: