Herskovits Myth of Negro Past
Herskovits Myth of Negro Past
Herskovits Myth of Negro Past
Author
14
|T S "7
Title
H- S\ ,
^^|L 1 \\*.C
en d> before ^helaNe last
This book should be returned
marked below.
THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
THE MYTH
OF THE
NEGRO PAST
MELVILLE J. HERSKOVITS
Professor of Anthropology
Northwestern University
FOREWORD ix
PREFACE xiii
This volume is the first published result of a Study which was an-
nounced in the Annual Report of the President of Carnegie Cor-
poration of New York for 1938 in the following terms:
The Corporation has for some time felt the need of a general study
of the Negro in the United States, not only as a guide to its own activ-
ities, but for broader reasons. It appeared to be essential that such a
study be made under the direction of a person who would be free from
the presuppositions and emotional charges which we all share to a greater
or less degree on this subject, and the Corporation, therefore, looked
outside the United States for a distinguished student of the social
sciences who would be available to organize and direct the project. It
is a pleasure to announce that Dr. Karl Gunnar Myrdal has been
ing memoranda rapidly and in a full and easy style which would
make them most useful for Dr. Myrdal's purposes. Thus, by defini-
tion, they were not to be formal, balanced manuscripts ready for
the printer and the public. The Committee found that every manu-
script submitted offered significant contributions. In serving the
purposes of the Study so well, the contributors necessarily subordi-
nated their individual publication interests to the interests of the
central project. This is evidence of unselfish team-play which deserves
1942.
most^qf it
quickly
:
and inevitably was lost before the ways of life
^
tials
the dominant white-man could -Be -learned. Yet cultural differen-
are so important in the social adjustment of different peoples
to each other that the retention even of cultural fragments from
Africa may introduce serious problems into Negro- white relations.
On the positive side, the origin of the distinctive cultural contribu-
tions of the Negro to American life must not be overlooked. Fur-
thermore, and entirely apart from immediate practical considera-
tions, the social scientist can learn about the general nature of
cultural development from the cultural history of the Negro in
America.
Every major activity in the career of Dr. Melville J. Herskovits
of Northwestern University as an anthropologist has contributed
to his qualifications for the preparation of this monograph on The
Myth of the Negro Past. He has studied the physical as well as the
FOREWORD xi
study could not have been made, ^or could it have been delegated to
another, for, since she has participated with me in all the ethno-
graphic field studies in my research program, she was uniquely
equipped to discern correspondences and to evaluate interpretations.
These pages have been written at the suggestion of Dr. Gunnar
Myrdal for the Study of the Negro in America which was insti-
tuted by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The survey char-
acter of the Study did not permit an intensive ethnological study
of a southern community to be made, against which to project pre-
vailing theories that expound Negro mores in the United States. It
is gratifying that, though this analysis was undertaken with mis-
MELVILLE J. HERSKOVITS
Evanston, Illinois
The myth of the Negro past is one of the principal supports of race
prejudice in this country. Unrecognized in its efficacy, it rationalizes
discrimination in everyday contact between Negroes and whites, in-
fluences the shaping of policy where Negroes are concerned, and
by scholars whose theoretical approach,
affects the trends of research
methods, and systems of thought presented to students are in har-
mony with it. Where all its elements are not accepted, no conflict
ensues even when, as in popular belief, certain tenets run contrary
to some of its component parts, since its acceptance is so little sub-
ject to question that contradictions are not likely to be scrutinized
too closely. The system is thus to be regarded as mythological in
the technical sense of the term, for, as will be made apparent, it
provides the sanction for deep-seated belief which gives coherence to
behavior.
This myth of the Negro past, which validates the concept of
Negro inferiority, may be outlined as follows:
Negroes are naturally of a childlike character, and adjust easily
j.
Only the poorer stock of Africa ivas enslaved, the more intelli-
2.
Since the Negroes were brought from all parts of the African
j.
continent, spoke diverse languages, represented greatly differing
bodies of custom, and, as a matter of policy, were distributed in the
New World so as to lose tribal identity, no least common denom-
inator of understanding or behavior could have possibly been worked
out by them;
2 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
tunity to live together, and tltat they had the will and ability to con-
tinue their customary modes of behavior, the cultures of Africa were
so savage and relatively so low in the scale of human civilization
that the apparent superiority of European customs as observed in
the behavior of their masters, would hazrc caused and actually did
cause them to give up such aboriginal traditions as they may other-
wise have desired to preserve;
prove that "Negro culture" can take its place among the "higher"
civilizations of mankind. Scientific thought has for some time ab-
1
For all notes see References beginning p. 300.
4 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
The .
Negro people
. . ..were brought to America in small con-
.
signments from many parts of the African continent and over a long
period of time. In the course of capture, importation, and enslavement
they lost every vestige of the African culture. The native languages
disappeared immediately and so completely that scarcely a word of
African origin found its way into English, owing to the dispersion, to
the accidental or intentional separation of tribal stocks, and to the sup-
pression of religious exercises. The supernatural beliefs and practices
completely disappeared; the native forms of family life and the codes
and customs of sex control were destroyed by the circumstances of slave
life; and procreation and the relations of the sexes were reduced to a
3
simple and primitive level, so with every element of the social heritage.
The Negro of the plantation came into the picture with a completely
broken cultural heritage. He came directly from Africa or indirectly
from Africa through the West Indies. There had been for him no
preparation for, and no organized exposure to, the dominant and ap-
proved patterns of American culture. What he knew of life was what he
could learn from other slaves or from the examples set by the white
planters themselves. In the towns where this contact was close there was
some effect, such as has many times been noted in the cultural differ-
ences between the early Negro house servants and the plantation hands.
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF AFRICANISMS 5
grouped homesteads
in the and plantations of America with fellow
blacks from divergent tribes whose customs differed widely, whose lan-
guages even they could not understand. A new life had to be formed
and was formed in the pattern of the New World. The old African
tribal was completely destroyed. From membership in their
society
primitive social units, Negroes were forced into the organization re-
quired by the plantation and by the demands of the particular American
families to which they were attached. The only folkways that had ele-
ments in common for all the slaves were those they found about them
in America. The Africans began to take hold of life where they could.
every case, the specifically negro forms turn out to be older English
forms which the negro must have taken originally from the white
man, and which he has retained after the white man has begun to
lose them." And from this he derives the methodological principle
on which his research is based "For the purpose of this study the
:
Gullah has been called the most African of any of our dialects, yet it
can be traced in practically every detail to English dialect speech. There
has been a popular belief in this country to the effect that Southern
white speech is what it is because of the Negro. This idea needs to be
6 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
reversed, for both the Negro and the white man in the South speak
8
English as they learned it from the latter's ancestors.
point of view of those cited, and of the many other students holding
this same position left uncited, these are to be regarded as deriving
ary, where they are not altogether lacking; but the controversy
aroused when the very problem is broached attests its vitality and
11
itsimportance.
The study has progressed far enough, however, to indicate some
of the main lines of approach. We
know today that the analysis of
African survivals among the Negroes of the United States involves
far more than the commonly attempted correlation of traits of Negro
behavior in this country with aboriginal tradition in Africa itself.
On the contrary, such an analysis, to be adequate, requires a series
of intermediate steps. A knowledge of the tribal origins of the
almost all those who write of the Negro make a capital point of this
variation variation in terms of the African continent as a whole,
however, rather than of that relatively restricted area from which
the slaves were predominantly derived. An analysis of the slave
trade as revealed in contemporary documents and in African tradi-
tions, to give us a knowledge of any selection it may have exercised,
and the reaction of the slaves to their status, is similarly essential.
The mechanisms of adjusting the newly arrived Africans to their
situation as slaves, and the extent to which these operated to permit
8 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
the retention of old habits, or to force the taking over of new modes
of behavior, or to make for a mingling of old patterns and newly
experienced alternatives, must be understood as thoroughly as the
data will permit.
Nor may any investigation on these lines confine itself to the
United States alone. For if any methodological caution has emerged
tically analyzed.
Thediscussion in these pages will therefore be oriented in accord-
ance with these principles. Our initial concern will be the African
background, the processes of enslavement, and the reaction of the
Negro to slavery. The accommodation of Negroes to their New
World setting and the resultant variation in the degree of accultura-
tion over the entire area where slavery existed will then be indicated,
while the aspects of Negro culture where Africanisms have been
most retained and those where the least of aboriginal endowment
is manifest, and the reasons for these differentials, will be pointed
Perhaps the earliest student in the United States to point out the
importance of research in the West Indies was U. G. Weatherly. He
stressed the significance of "social groups in an insular environ-
ment,'* particularly where, as here, an historical record is at hand
to aid in determining the experience of the people, and where con-
tact with the outside world and other factors such as "internal revo-
lutions" or "radical shifts in control from the outside" have made
for "something more than rectilineal development." The "smaller
West Indian Islands, extending from St. Thomas to the South
American coast," according to him, "possess many of these charac-
Here the present culture is the result of contact between
teristics."
Africans and Europeans of many nationalities, and their historical
experience has been that of transfer from one of these European
powers to another, with consequent historically known changes in
cultural impulses. In addition, with the "European population as a
sults might ceme from the opportunity of working out some of the
principles of pure social science. These communities, by reason of their
isolation and peculiar cultural status, offer a nearer approach to social
development. In the group are men and women highly and fully edu-
cated and defined, persons who have thoroughly assimilated the Euro-
pean cultural heritage and have in some respects added to it. At the
opposite extreme are persons but slightly removed from the African
culture level. There are other groups of longer time in America but
whose residence in the isolated regions of the hinterland has so re-
tarded the assimilative process that they are still, in many respects, out-
side the modern culture. There are Negroes in America who speak
dialects hardly intelligible to outsiders. ... In the group
it is possible
majority, the reasons for this can be phrased in such terms as "isola-
tion," "discrimination," and the like.
In the minds of these students, however, the major problem has
been the obvious one of racial aptitudes and limitations, as, for ex-
ample, is to be seen in the following :
Now the Negro belongs perhaps to the most docile and modifiable of
all races. He
readily takes the tone and color of his social environment,
assimilating to the dominant culture with little resistance. Further, he
is ordinarily, though not quite correctly, assumed to have brought with
him from Africa little cultural equipment of his own. If culture is dif-
position for expression rather than enterprise and action. The changes
which have taken place in the manifestations of this temperament have
been actuated by an inherent and natural impulse, characteristic of all
living things, to persist and maintain themselves in a changed environ-
ment. Such changes have occurred as are likely to take place in any
organism in its struggle to live and to use its environment to further
and complete its own existence. 22
aged.
recognized, to be sure, that no matter how the problem is
It is
degree to which, under the racial crossing that has occurred every-
where in the New World, such inherent tendencies have persisted.
The study of the results of race-crossing is important, and there
are aspects of such research where, as in the matter of social selec-
tion, the mores must be taken into account. But the reverse is not
true, and had the social scientists who have indicated the research
potentialities in the study of New
World Negroes been more con-
cerned with their major field of interest, and less with the relation-
ship between race and culture; if, above all, had they not assumed
that the Negro presented a cultural tabula rasa on which to receive
this New World
experience, their suggestions might have stimulated
the studies whose usefulness they recognized.
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF AFRICANISMS 15
close and continuous contact not alone with Europeans, but with
Caribs, Javanese, British Indians, and Chinese as well, the results
of close study were startling. In the interior, a full-blown African
religious system, a smoothly functioning African clan organization,
African place and personal names, African elements in economic
life, a style of wood carving that could be traced to African sources
African culture has not by any means been lost to them. Next on our
table we should place such isolated groups living in the United States
as the Negroes of the Savannahs of southern Georgia, or those of the
Gullah islands off the Carolina coast, where African elements of cul-
ture are still more tenuous, and then the vast mass of Negroes of all
A
further tool, which has been of increasing use as research has
proceeded, is the concept of an Old World cultural province. As one
comes to know the cultures of the entire African continent, one be-
comes cognizant of numerous cultural correspondences between
African, European, and Asiatic civilizations. As will be indicated
later in our discussion, this is most apparent in the field of folk-
lore, where, for example, animal tales of the Uncle Remus type
are found in the Reynard cycle of medieval Europe, in the fables
of Aesop, in the Panchatantra of India, in the Jataka tales of China,
and in the animal stories of Indonesia. Certain aspects of the use of
magic, of ordeals, of the role and forms of divination, of concep-
tions of the universe (especially the organization of deities in rela-
tact, is strong but resilient, with a resiliency that itself has sanction
in aboriginal tradition.For the African holds it is pointless not to
seek an adaptation of outer form, where this can "in a manner" be
achieved. Before this point can be discussed at length, however, we
must consider the significance of our analysis of cultural tenacity
and resilience for those issues of practical importance, suggested in
the opening section of this chapter, which no student of the Negro,
however detached his approach, may disregard.
We turn again, therefore, to the phenomenon of race prejudice,
the factor that provides the rationalization for many of the inter-
racial strains that are the essence of concern to the practical man.
Racial prejudice, when found to rest on the operation
analyzed, is
this area are immediate, and call so compellingly for solution that
the impulse to render first aid is difficult to resist. Moreover, on the
already sketched. And this, too often, gives these problems an air
of remoteness which militates against their appeal to those seeking
the immediate solution of pressing needs. Yet these factors are as
deeply intrenched in the interracial situation as are those other ele-
ments which lie on the social and economic level, and they are far
quires the constant control of white people to keep him in check. With-
out the presence of the white police force Negroes would turn upon
themselves and destroy each other. The white man is the only authority
he knows." 36
with a naked African, having a ring in his nose and a dagger in his hand.
Here, as elsewhere, in order to put the lofty position to which the white
race has attained in sharper contrast with the lowly condition of a
more primitive people, the best among the white people was contrasted
with the worst among the black." Washington related that he uncon-
sciously took over the prevalent feeling that there must be something
wrong and degraded about any person who was different from the
87
customary.
Fellatah Empire, before the arrival of the Europeans, the natives had
learned to read and write in Arabic, and had established several notable
educational centers. 38
The
characteristic of self-abasement, involving as it does a lack of
self-respect, explains the Negro's extraordinary imitativeness. "This
slavish imitation of the white," says Mecklin, "even to the attempted
obliteration of physical characteristics, such as wooly hair, is almost
pathetic, and exceedingly significant as indicating the absence of feeling
of race pride or race integrity. Any imitation of one race by another,
of such a wholesale and servile kind as to involve complete self-abnega-
39
tion, must be disastrous to all concerned."
comparable statements are not often met in the more recent works,
22 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
H. Thomas, himself a Negro, also noted the childish traits of his race:
"The Negro lives only in the present, and though at times doleful in
language and frantic in grief, he is, like a child, readily soothed by
trifles and easily diverted by persuasive speech." ... If cheerfulness
is characteristic of children and of the Negro mind, so also are impul-
siveness and fits of anger. The Negro, like a child, is easily irritated,
and prone to quarrel and to fight. When angered he becomes a "raving
Amazon, as it were, apparently beyond control, growing madder and
madder each moment, eyes rolling, lips protruding, feet stamping, paw-
40
ing, gesticulating."
Back of the child, and affecting him both directly and indirectly, are
the characteristics of the race. The Negro has little home conscience or
love of home. . . He
has no pride of ancestry
. has few ideals . . .
. . . little
conception of the meaning of virtue, truth, honor, manhood,
integrity. He is shiftless, untidy, and indolent the migratory or . . .
shirks details and difficult tasks. . . . He does not know the value of
his word or the meaning of words in general. . . . The Negro is im-
provident and extravagant; ... he lacks initiative; he is often dis-
honest and untruthful. He is over-religious and superstitious ... his
mind does not conceive of faith in humanity he does not compre-
hend it. 41
Thus Odum conceived Negro mentality in 1910; his concept of the
form of education best suited to Negro children may also be indi-
cated as cogent :
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF AFRICANISMS 23
. . . Let the influences upon the Negro child, at least as far as the
school able to effect this end, lead him toward the unquestioning
is
acceptance of the fact that his is a different race from the white, and
properly so ; that it always has been and always will be that it is not ;
concepts, this older view of Negro endowment and the Negro past
may be rationalized. That it is to be hoped that this writer's evalua-
tion of the Negro of the United States is somewhat more accurate
than his exposition of African civilization is aside from the point,
which has to do with the light the quotation throws on the way a
concept, once developed, may present itself in new form.
It must be stressed that we are at the moment concerned only
The climate in fact not only discourages but prohibits mental effort
of severe or sustained character, and the negroes have submitted to that
prohibition as to many others, through countless generations, with ex-
cellent grace. ... It can hardly be maintained that savage life is idyllic.
Yet the question remains, and may long remain, whether the manner in
which the negroes were brought into touch with civilization resulted in
the greater blessing or the greater curse. That manner was determined
in part at least by the nature of the typical negroes themselves. Impul-
sive and inconstant, sociable and amorous, voluble, dilatory and negli-
gent, but robust, amiable, obedient and contented, they have been the
world's premium slaves. 47
sex life is in part a result of cultural background, yet the sexual indul-
gence of the Negro, so open in Africa and in many parts of the rural
South, may conceivably be a racial characteristic developed by natural
selection in West Africa as a result of the frightful mortality. . . .
the future are traits common not only to Africans and many Negroes,
48
but to almost all undisciplined primitive peoples.
the story of his marvelous progress without great amazement, and the
amazement is all the more heightened when one sees the humble begin-
nings of the race. On the other hand there can be little doubt that there
are vestigial remains of a far social heritage in the present social reac-
tions of the American Negro, which if not understood will vitiate all
of our judgments concerning him. 49
The student of the American Negro today must therefore come to his
task with a knowledge of the Negro's past if he is to really understand
him at the present. He must be willing to judge him as to the distance
he has traveled since he left his African home, rather than compared
with the white man who had thousands of years the start. He must
recognize the traits built into a race during long centuries cannot be
bred out in a few years or even a few decades, and that the political and
economic life of the present American Negro in the light of his back-
51
ground, is nothing less than amazing.
Ten
years after the publication of the volume in which the above
passages appeared, the author obtained a collaborator and saw a
new light. Whether the collaborator was responsible for the change
of opinion, or further consideration on his own part brought this
about, cannot be said, but a far different point of view is expressed
in the collaborative work, which, for the sake of perspective, can
also be quoted :
Since the culture of Africa therefore is quite different from our own,
we are apt to conclude it is inferior. For have we not felled the forest,
dug up the ores from the earth, fashioned powerful machines, annihilated
space, subdued nature to our bidding? The African had done none of
these things in such marked degree as have we; hence we are inclined
to say his culture is inferior and the Africans as a people are inferior.
Aptitude? of people may be proven far more by ability to adapt their
culture to the environment in which they live than by ability to borrow
culture from all the rest of the world, and on this basis we may find
upon further study that the African peoples have much to commend
them to our respect. 52
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF AFRICANISMS 27
Although all the writers who have alluded to these superstitions have
assumed that they are an inheritance from Africa, I shall be able to make
it appear first, that the name Vaudoux, or Voodoo, is derived from a
:
European source secondly, that the beliefs which the word denotes are
;
equally imported from Europe; thirdly, that the alleged sect and its
supposed rites have, in all probability, no real existence, but are a
54
product of popular imagination.
With the last claim we are not concerned, but in "establishing" his
other propositions, Newell curiously adumbrates the method of
those who, in various have derived the peculiarities of Negro
fields,
custom from European sources. For he conceives the almost purely
African rites of the vodun cult as mere misunderstanding, by Hai-
tian Negroes, of the French heretical sect of the Waldenses, whose
name was mispronounced, as its ritual was distorted by the blacks
when they adopted this cult in favor of their aboriginal religious
beliefs.
The quotations given in the opening pages of this discussion may
be taken as typifying the point of view of most present-day students
of the Negro. The African past may perhaps be considered as ap-
pearing fragmentarily in a few aspects of contemporary Negro life
of the United States, but such survivals are to be studied only in
the most complete antiquarian sense. African culture may be con-
ceded a greater degree of comparative respectability than was earlier
the case though, as has been seen, the point of view which Hoff-
man, Tillinghast, Dowd, Mecklin, the earlier manifestations of
Odum and Weather ford, and others put forward concerning the
low caliber of African modes of life has by no means lost its vital-
ity. But African culture, in any event, is held unimportant and hence
can be disregarded in studying Negro life in this country today.
This is the point of view expressed in Powdermaker's study of
Indianola :
The Negro did not come here culturally naked, but the conditions of
slavery were such that a large part of his aboriginal culture was of
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF AFRICANISMS 29
The native African dialects have been completely lost. That this should
have happened is not surprising, for it is a linguistic axiom that when
two groups of people with different languages come into contact, the one
on a relatively high, the other on a relatively low cultural level, the latter
adapts itself freely to the speech of the former, whereas the group on
the higher cultural plane borrows little or nothing from that on the
lower. 58
Africa from which the New World Negroes were derived, when
described in terms of the findings of modern scientific method, are
found to be vastly different from the current stereotype? What if
these cultures impressed themselves on their carriers, and the de-
scendants of their carriers, too deeply to be eradicated any more than
were the cultural endowments of the various groups of European
immigrants? More than this, what if the aboriginal African endow-
30 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
strengthened by the findings of studies that ignore the only valid point
of departure in social investigation the historical background of the
phenomenon being studied and those factors which make for its existence
and perpetuation. When, for instance, one sees vast programs of Negro
education undertaken without the slightest consideration being given to
even the possibility of some retention of African habits of thought and
speech that might influence the Negroes' reception of the instruction
thus offered, one cannot but ask how we hope to reach the desired ob-
jectives. When we are confronted with psychological studies of race
relations made in utter ignorance of characteristic African patterns of
motivation and behavior, or with sociological analyses of Negro family
life which make not the slightest attempt to take into account even the
chance that the phenomenon being studied might in some way have been
influenced by the carry-over of certain African traditions when we ;
makes him an all too visible mark for prejudice, it is not so well
realized that the accepted opinion of the nature of the Negro's cul-
tural heritage is what makes him the only element in the peopling
of the United States that has no operative past except in bondage.
There is still another point of practical importance that should
not be overlooked in appraising the implications of proper study of
Negro backgrounds and of the retention of Africanisms. And this
isthe effect of the present-day representatives of this race without
a past, of the deprivation they suffer in bearing no pride of tradi-
tion. in the population of this country has been more
For no group
completely convinced of the inferior nature of the African back-
ground than have the Negroes. Woodson has phrased the point in
these terms:
of the traditions and culture of the Negro group. To be sure, when one
undertakes the study of the Negro he discovers a great poverty of
traditions and patterns of behavior that exercise any real influence on
the formation of the Negro's personality and conduct. If, as Keyserling
32 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
remarks, the most striking thing about the Chinese is their deep culture,
the most conspicuous thing about the Negro is his lack of a culture. 61
It is little wonder
that to mention Africa to a Negro audience sets
itself, has not given and cannot give the needed information. Only
in coordination with the etlinologicaf phase of the dual attack im-
plicit in the ethno-historical method can documentation, otherwise
meaningless, realize its greatest significance. Historical scholars have
for years considered the problem of the African origins of the slaves,
but without knowledge of the cultures of the regions toward which
the materials in the documents pointed, they were unable to validate
their hypotheses, even when, as was not always the case, they had
adequate acquaintance with the local geography of Africa and could
thus make effective use of the place names which recur in the con-
temporary literature.
33
34 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
some 3,000 miles -but also the dangers attendant upon such jour-
neys terms
in of the hostility between many of the tribes over the
area and the absence of adequate lines of communication, to say
nothing of the slight economic gain from such hazardous commerce
even were the highest prices to be paid for such slaves.
The earlier writers give astonishingly little justification, in their
own works, for their statements on the extensiveness of the slave
traffic. For example, though Bryan Edwards writes of the "immense
distance to the sea-coast" traveled by slaves, yet of the cases he cites
of Jamaican slaves he questioned about their African homes, only
1
for "Adam, a Congo boy/ is his assertion borne out, though even
THE SEARCH FOR TRIBAL ORIGINS 35
Adam is merely claimed to have come "from a vast distance inland."
The four Negroes from the Gold Coast could not have lived far
from the sea, the Ebo village Edwards speaks of was "about one
day's journey from the sea-coast," while the fifth, a Chamba from
1
Sierra Leone, also came from relatively near the coast.
Mungo Park has given us our only firsthand account of the
adventures of a slave coffle, but his description gives little support
to those who emphasize the "thousand-mile" journeys made to the
2
coast. On April 19, 1797, Mr. Park departed from Kamalia, in the
Bambara country, with slaves for the American market. The Gambia
was reached on June I, at a point some hundred miles from the sea
where seagoing ships could come, and fifteen days later an Ameri-
can ship, bound for South Carolina, took slaves as cargo and Mr.
Park as passenger. The distance traversed by the caravan was about
500 miles, or, for the 44 days in transit, an average of between n
and 12 miles per day. The question may well be raised whether the
translation of time into space, of the slow progress from sources
of supply to the coastal factories, might not have been an impor-
tant factor in giving the weight of logic to the conception of the
1
A
source of information on the provenience of slaves which has
remained almost entirely uncxploitcd is the tradition about slaving
in Africa itself. InDahomey, for example, a kingdom on the Guinea
coast which extended from its port, Whydah, some 150 miles into
the interior, the annual "war" operated to supply the slave dealers.
There are no traditions among these people that they acted as
middlemen for traders farther inland they were, in fact, avoided
;
by the merchant folk, such as the Hausa, since the stranger in their
kingdom was himself fair game. The peoples raided by the Da-
homeans lived no farther from the coast than 200 miles, while most
of their victims came from much nearer. Tribes to the east and west,
rather than to the north, were the easiest prey, and
hencejhe Nago
(Yoruba) of Nigeria and the people of the present Togoland are
-found to figure most prominently in native lists of the annual cam
3
paigns.
The Gold Coast was occupied by the Fanti
coastal area of the
tribes, who, because of their control of this strategic region, acted
'as middlemen for tribes to the north. Yet all evidence from recog-
nizable survivals such as the many Ashanti-Akan-Fanti place names,
names of deities, and day names in the New World are evidence that
the sources of the slaves exported by the Fanti were in greatest pro-
portion within the present boundaries of the Gold Coast colony. This
36 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
groups which, like those in the country lying behind it, are small
and autonomous and thus, politically, in contrast to those larger
entities,which we term kingdoms and empires, of the other parts
of the slaving area. In this hinterland it was group against group,
and kidnaping was probably more customary than anywhere else,
though the oral tradition of the care taken by mothers to guard
their children from unsupervised contact with strangers heard every-
where in West Africa and the use of folk tales to impress children
with the danger of leaving the familial compound are eloquent of
the fears engendered by the slavers in all the vast region.
Large numbers of slaves were shipped from the Niger Delta
region, as indicated by the manifests of ships loaded at Calabar and
Bonny, the principal ports. These were mainly Ibo slaves represent-
ing a people which today inhabits a large portion of this region.
Their tendency to despondency, noted in many parts of the New
World, and a tradition of suicide as a way out of difficulties has
often been remarked, as, for example, in Haiti where the old saying
"Ibos pend' cor' a yo The Ibo hang themselves" 4 is still current.
That this attitude toward life is still well recognized among the Ibo
in Africa was corroborated in the field recently by Dr. J. S. Harris. 5
The same tendency was noticed among the " Calabar " Negroes
another generic name for Ibos among the slaves in the United
States, as is indicated by the remark of the biographer of Henry
Laurens, that in South Carolina "the frequent suicides among Cala-
bar slaves indicate the different degrees of sensitive and independent
6
spirit among the various Negro tribes,"
To the east of the Cross River lie the Cameroons and Gaboon,
THE SEARCH FOR TRIBAL ORIGINS 37
which figured little in the slave trade. The worth of these Negroes
was held to be slight, as the following quotation indicates :
the so-called Gaboons must have been in reality Pygmies caught in the
inland equatorial forests, for Bosman, who traded among the Gaboons,
merely inveighed against their garrulity, their indecision, their gulli-
bility and their fondness for strong drink, while as to their physique
he observed: "they are mostly large, robust well-shaped men/' 7
. . .
though perhaps six or seven thousand slaves left Kano every year
for the Gold Coast, two-thirds or three-fourths of that number returned
north as carriers, the capacity in which they had acted during the south-
ward journey. And though we may suppose that more than five caravans
departed from Kano each year when the slave trade was at its height,
and that a smaller proportion of slaves than that named were returned
as carriers of merchandise, even then the number who arrived at the
coastal factories could constitute but a fraction of the enormous num-
bers of slaves whom the record tells us were shipped from Gold Coast
13
ports.
necessary. A
qualification must, however, be made explicit and
emphatic, for, as in other points at which research tends to con-
travene the accepted "mythology," an exception taken is interpreted
as an assertion made. Hence it is necessary here to state unequiv-
ocally that in positing derivation from coastal tribes for the major
portion of the slaves, it is not intended to convey that no slaves
came from distant points inland or even from East Africa. Some
great in the Gulf of Guinea upon whose shores the vast fan-shaped
14
hinterland poured its exiles among converging lines . . ,
the soundest that for purposes of the study "of slavery the West
Indies and the United States must be considered a unit, he details
the categories of slaves recognized in Jamaica and elsewhere in the
area.The names of these slave types are tribal or place names, all of
which are to be found on present-day maps of Africa if one knows
where to look and has sufficient detailed knowledge of the geography
of Africa to equating the nomenclature of the period
facilitate
It would appear that the Congoes, Angolas and Eboes were especially
Jamaica workhouses in 1803 there were 284 Eboes and Mocoes, 185
Congos and 259 Angolas as compared with 101 Mandingoes, 60 Chambas
(from Sierra Leone), 70 Coromantees, 57 Nagoes and Pawpaws, and
30 scattering, along with a total of 488 American-born negroes and
16
mulattoes, and 187 unclassified.
The absence in this passage of any mention of the Gold Coast, "Slave"
Coast (Dahomey and Togo), or western Nigeria is noteworthy, yet
despite these omissions he reasons cogently regarding the population
resources of this area, and the economic advantages of operation
from it, though again he accepts explanations for the density in
terms which, to say the least, are open to debate :
Here was the locality closest to America, the one with the densest
population (more than half the total population of Africa was located
in this western equatorial zone), with the inhabitants consisting largely
of the more passive inland people driven to the coast by inland tribes
42 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
expanding towards the sea. This mild and pacific disposition was en-
hanced by the tropical climate and excessive humidity of the coast. 18
The great markets for slaves in Africa were on the West Coast, but
the old slave trails ran back from the coast far into the interior of the
continent,and all peoples of Central Africa contributed to the stream of
enforced emigration to the New World. 20
pared to the Negroes in other parts of the Antilles. For in this rarely
cited work, we find what a man could discover when he queried
"salt-water" slaves those born in Africa and asked them their
places of birth, the names of their tribes and the peoples bordering
on the areas their own groups occupied, the names of their rulers,
their gods, and various words from their vocabularies. The harvest
for the student of New World Negro origins who uses this book
is,
degree to which the various parts of Africa were drawn upon for
human materials. Such an analysis discloses that those portions of
West Africa named in this chapter as the regions where the fore-
THE SEARCH FOR TRIBAL ORIGINS 45
In the Northern colonies at large the slaves imported were more gen-
erally drawn from the West Indies than directly from Africa/ The
reasons were several. Small parcels, better suited to the retail demand,
might be brought more profitably from the sugar islands whither New
England, New York and Pennsylvania ships were frequently plying
than from Guinea whence special voyages must be made. Familiarity
with the English language and the rudiments of civilization at the outset
were more essential to petty masters than to the owners of plantation
gangs who had means of breaking in fresh Africans by deputy. But
most important of all, a sojourn in the West Indies would lessen the
than ten per vessel being the exception, and the large majority of
manifests listing but two or three. This "retail" nature of slaving
operations to the North, furthermore, is a factor of some conse-
quence in assessing differential rates of acculturation to European
patterns as between northern and southern Negroes, since the op-
portunities for learning European ways were far greater for these
northern Negroes than for slaves sent to the plantations of the South,
or for those in the West Indies who lived even more remote from
white contact.
From the point of view of the African provenience of northern
Negroes, the manifests tell us little even where a shipment came
direct, since the entry, "coast of Affrica," is the one most frequently
set down; something which, indeed, contrasts interestingly with the
specific names of the West Indian ports where the slaves were pro-
cured. What is important in the documents from the northern states
46 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
are the letters of the slavers, who in reports to their owners mention
the ports and the tribes which have been indicated as the source of
New World slaves. Thus Captain Peleg Clarke, writing from "Cape
Coast Roade" in the Gold Coast to John Fletcher under date of
6 July, 1776, says:
The
abstracts of ships' manifests which account for slaves im-
ported into the southern colonies give much exact information about
the African regions where their cargoes were procured. As is to be
anticipatedfrom the comparison of direct trading between Africa
and northern and southern ports, the proportion of slaves reimported
from the West Indies drops sharply. A tabulation of the raw data
found in the manifests recorded from Virginia between the years
40
1710 and 1769 gives the following results:
THE SEARCH FOR TRIBAL ORIGINS 47
Source of origin given as "Africa" 20, 564
Gambia (including Senegal and Goree) 3 ,652
"Guinea" (from sources indicated as Gold Coast, Cabo-
corso Castle, Bande, Bance Island, and Windward Coast) 6,777
Calabar (Old Calabar, New Calabar and Bonny) 9,224
Angola 3 860 ,
Madagascar 1 ,01 1
52,504
Per. Cur. Madagascar being a country where the slave trade is prac-
48 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
the petition to show her ancestor was free in her own country to entitle
her to freedom. 41
Liberia and the Ivory Coast (Rice and Grain Coasts) 3*851
"Guinea Coast" (Gold Coast to Calabar) 18,240
Angola 11,485
Congo 10,924
Mozambique 243
East Africa 230
67,769
Gambia 673
Windward Coast 2,669
Gold Coast I43 12
Anamaboe 8 ,488
"Gold Coast" 5,824
Togo and Dahomey 39i2
Pawpaw 131
Whydah 3.781
Niger Delta 10,305
Benin 1 ,039
Bonny 3*052
Calabar and Old Calabar 6,214
Gaboon 155
Angola i ,984
Total 34,010
region, the traders came more and more to seek their goods along
the Guinea coast, and here most of the slaving was carried on dur-
ing the last half of the eighteenth century. With the nineteenth
century, the weight of the abolitionist movement began to make it-
self felt, and when the trade was outlawed, the captains of slave
vessels had to cruise more widely than before. They found the Congo
1750 I 14 7
1751 i ii 5
1752 2 20 8
1753
1754
1755
3
155
i
* *
77
Jj
8
7
1763 24 9
1764 2 20 8
1765 18 12
1766 3 ii ii
1767 J5 6
1768 I Jj 4
1769 18 6
1770 2 10 8
1771 i 13 9
1772 2 8 6
1773 i jj 10
1774 2 6 10
1775 JJ 6
1776 I 12 5
1777 JJ 2
* * *
1783 8 n 18
1784 3 8 Q
1785 II II 14 2
52 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
1788 16 16 2
1789 19 22
1790 18 22 2
1791 I 9 *7 2
1792 2 8 18 3
Not until 1783, except for one year, does the Congo traffic exceed
that from the Guinea coast but after this time the French traders
;
also, because of economic and political reasons that need not be gone
into here, turned increasingly southward. And while not a single
Mozambique cargo appears until 1785, after that year the demand
seems to have been great enough to cause a few ships to be sent there
annually. It must be observed, however, that the number is too slight
to influence appreciably the demography of the New World Negro
population.
Let us consider another facet of the problem. It is not difficult to
see that the slaves who came late to the New World had to accom-
modate themselves to patterns of Negro behavior established earlier
on the basis of the customs of the tribes represented during the
middle period of slaving. In Haiti, Congo slaves are said to have
been more complacent than those from other parts of Africa, and
were held in contempt by those Negroes who refused to accept the
slave status with equanimity. Tradition has it that when the blacks
rose in revolt, these Congo slaves were killed in large numbers, since
it was felt they could not be trusted. Mr. Cruickshank has advanced
a cogent suggestion :
pear that the three or four African Nations who were brought here in
predominant numbers imposed their language, beliefs, etc., gradually on
the others. In course of time there were not enough of the minority
tribes on an estate to take part in customs, dances and the like, or even
to carry on the language. There was nobody left to talk to! Children
growing up heard another African language far of tener than their own ;
they were even laughed at when they said some of their mother's words
when they "cut country," as it was said and so the language of the
49
minority tribes, and much else though probably never all died out.
Though African survivals in the United States are far fewer than
in British Guiana, nonetheless, a similar process may well have oper-
ated. It might also be hazarded that, in the instance of early Sene-
THE SEARCH FOR TRIBAL ORIGINS S3
face in drawing up our base line for the study of deviation from
African tradition, leading to the two tasks which constitute the next
step in our analysis. The cultures of the tribes of the area must first
be described as an aid to direct comprehension of the New World
data, and this description must be compared with published accounts
of the Negro's cultural heritage. We must then determine whether
more generalized aspects of West African culture are to be dis-
covered. For if such aspects are held in common both by the dom-
inant tribes and by all the other folk of the entire area from which
slaves were brought, we will be afforded further insight into those
more subtle survivals which, because they represent the deepest
seated aspects of African tradition, have persisted even where overt
forms of African behavior and African custom have completely
disappeared.
Chapter III
to the same sources for their African materials, where they did not
draw on the works of each other, and none had firsthand contact
with any of the native peoples he mentions, their substantial agree-
ment in describing and, is more significant, in evaluating the
what
civilizations of Guineanot surprising. The unanimity of their
is
54
THE AFRICAN CULTURAL HERITAGE 55
granted.
Aside from the compendia mentioned, those who, like Tillinghast,
Dowd, Weatherford, and others to whom we are at the morrient
giving our attention, write of Africa also lean heavily on the works
6
of A. B. Ellis. Though Ellis had actual experience on the Gold
56 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
ciency ... so abundant is nature's provision for food and other wants,
;
that with little effort they obtain what is needed. ... In the case of
cultivated produce, the fertility of the soil and the climatic advantages
are such that very large returns are yielded to slight labor. 10
ability for sustained toil, his need to work and work hard if he is to
extract a living from the soil, have been remarked by all those who
have made serious firsthand studies of the labor required to main-
tain life in the region. Should precise testimony be desired awaiting
the appearance of Harris' analyses of the actual number of hours
11
spent in work by the Ibo, reference may be made to the study by
12
Forde, wherein the effort and planning involved in carrying on
agriculture among the Yako of the region which lies at the bend of
the west coast are made plain.
Again, Tillinghast informs us :
Once more, misstatements are found in almost every line. The phi-
Here also we
are confronted with assertions that are directly con-
travened by the facts. As will be seen, the large number of spe-
cialized crafts are indicative of a corresponding degree of division
of labor. The popular assumption of the savage male as lazy, allow-
ing his women to carry on the work necessary for subsistence, is
far removed from the actuality of the sex division of labor, which
invades all fields. That the women do agricultural labor 16 is but an
expression of the forms of sex division of labor universal in human
societies, literate or not; in Africa the arrangement makes the men
responsible for the really heavy work of preparing the fields, and
leaves to the women the lighter tasks of caring for the growing
plants, harvesting the crops, and preparing food. As a matter of
fact, the economic position of women in West Africa is high. It is
based on the fact that the women are traders quite as much as agri-
cultural workers, and on recognition that what they earn is their
own. They do none of the iromvorking or wood carving or house-
building or weaving or carrying of burdens or other heavy labor.
This is reserved for the men. They unquestionably contribute their
share to the support of the household and the community; but they
are not the exploited creatures undisciplined fancy would have them.
It is not possible here to detail all the misconceptions which char-
opment is indicated as being "on a par with the low stage attained in
18
all other directions" specific reference being made to the Ashanti
and to Dahomey, where "vanquished tribes are extinguished by
slaughter or held as slaves/' Or we
learn of "customs regulating
property and personal relations after a crude fashion," 19 another
error the more glaring in the light of general recognition of the
African's "legal genius." All these misconceptions are evaluated
THE AFRICAN CULTURAL HERITAGE 59
The most striking feature of the African negro is the low forms of
social organization, the lack of industrial and political cooperation, and
consequently the almost entire absence of social and national self-
consciousness. This rather than intellectual inferiority explains the lack
of social sympathy, the presence of such barbarous institutions as can-
nibalism and slavery, the low position of woman, inefficiency in the indus-
trial and mechanical arts, thelow type of group morals, rudimentary
art-sense, lack of race pride and self-assertiveness, and an intellectual
20
and religious life largely synonymous with fetichism and sorcery.
tions, viewed from the perspective of the last three decades of art
history, is the statement concerning the "rudimentary art-sense" of
the Africans. For an outstanding development of modern art has
been the steady growth of interest in African West African
wood carving and other art forms, and the influence of these forms
on many of the painters of the present day.
Reuter, whose textbook has already been quoted as an example
of the manner in which this approach and point of view still lives in
standard works dealing with the Negro population of the United
States, will give our series its most recent instance. The excerpt is
from the second edition, which, appearing in 1938, can be taken to
represent the present position of its author. Social life in West
21
Africa is dismissed in this edition (the earlier one went into some
detail concerning African family terms typical of what has
life in
Fear was the basic element in the religious complex of the Negroes. In
the conditions of primitive existence in the African environment it could
not well have been otherwise. The life of the native was never safe. Per-
sonal danger was the universal fact of life. There was an almost com-
plete lack of control of natural forces. The forests and rivers were full
of dangerous animals, and dangerous human enemies were always close
at hand. The insect pests and the tropical diseases made the conditions of
life hard and its duration brief. To the real dangers were added an
abundance of malignant spirits. An ever present fear of the natural and
supernatural enemies was the normal condition of daily life and pro-
tection was the ever present need. These facts everywhere found ex-
pression in the religious and magical beliefs and practices. The state of
religious development varied considerably with tribal groups. In some
tribes nature worship was elaborated to the point where definite super-
natural powers had been differentiated to preside over definite spheres
of life. In other groups the basic fetichism was modified by and com-
bined with a worship of nature. In certain of the politically more ad-
vanced groups ancestor worship was an important element in the
religious complex. But everywhere the practices were directly designed
to placate or coerce the malignant and insure the co-operation of the
beneficent powers. Since was the nature of the latter to aid, the cultus
it
procedure in their case was less important and was quite commonly
neglected. Magic, both sympathetic and imitative, was practiced by pri-
vate individuals as well as by professional magicians. Sickness, accident,
injury, death, and other misfortunes were attributed to evil influences
exercised by or through some person, and the effort to find the persons
guilty of exercising evil influence lay at the basis of the witch trials
and the other bloody religious sacrifices of the African peoples. 22
THE AFRICAN CULTURAL HERITAGE 61
way may its misstatements be set forth. Much of what is said here,
if divested of comment and evaluative adjectives, might be regarded
as true in a generalized sense, as, for example, that there are good
as well as evil forces or that nature worship obtains. Yet words like
"crude" and "simple," or the emphasis on naivete, and, above all,
the picture of the fear-ridden native the conception of the dangers
;
tropical jungle and its denizens, are far from the truth. Equally
fallacious are the presumed neglect of the beneficent powers, whose
existence in the system is mentioned because of the author's belief
in the preoccupation of the native with the forces of evil, and the
manner in which the role of magic is conceived. All these leave a
residue of impression calculated to prepare the reader for the in-
capability of the Negro, with a background of tradition such as this,
to grasp higher and more restrained aspects of belief and ceremonial-
ism such as he presumably encountered in the New
World.
Today, as in the days of the great traffic in slaves, the tribes living
in the heart of the slaving area are the Akan-Ashanti folk of the
Gold Coast, the Dahomeans, the Yoruba of western Nigeria, and the
Bini of eastern Nigeria. Composites of many smaller groups,
welded through a long process of conquest into more or less homo-
geneous kingdoms, they share many traits in common. Their num-
bers are large as primitive societies go, and consequently many prob-
lems of economic, social, and political organization must be met if
smooth functioning is to be achieved. It follows that complex insti-
tutions in those fields are the rule. The ensuing discussion will touch
upon those aspects of the cultures of these kingdoms which, germane
to their functioning, have been impinged upon but little by the cir-
cumstances of European political domination.
The economic life, adapted to the support of large populations,
is far more intricate than is customarily expected or, indeed, found
an important part. Women, who are for the most part the sellers in
the market, retain their gains for themselves, often becoming inde-
pendently wealthy. With their high economic status, they have like-
wise perfected disciplined organizations to protect their interests in
the markets. These organizations comprise one of the primary price-
fixing agencies, prices being set on the basis of supply and demand,
with due consideration for the cost of transporting goods to market.
Slavery has long existed in the entire region, and in at least one
of its kingdoms, Dahomey, a kind of plantation system was found
under which an absentee ownership, with the ruler as principal, de-
manded the utmost return from the estates, and thus created condi-
tions of labor resembling the regime the slaves were to encounter
in the New World. Whether this system was the exception rather
than the rule cannot be said, for this aspect of the economic order,
as the first suppressed under European rule, is not easy to document
satisfactorily. On the whole, slaveholding was of the household vari-
ety, with large numbers of slaves the property of the chief, and
important either as export goods (to enable the rulers to obtain
guns, gunpowder, European cloths, and other commodities) or as
ritual goods (for the sacrifices, required almost exclusively of roy-
sib (clan) and finally the sib itself, comprising large numbers of
;
persons whose face-to- face contact with each other may be intimate
or casual or nonexistent. Guild organization tends, in the majority
of cases, to follow the lines of these kinship groupings. Since the
principal occupation is agriculture, landholdings are conceived in
terms of family rather than individual rights; and while, as in all
primitive societies, a man has the exclusive ownership of the pro-
duce of whatever land he works, the land itself is not his. As a mem-
ber of a relationship group of considerable size, however, he has an
assurance of support in time of need. This has contributed largely
to the stability of these societies, since the economic aspect reinforces
the social one in a peculiarly intimate manner, and causes the rela-
tionship group to hold added significance for its members.
The fundamental sanction of the kinship system is the ancestral
cult,which, in turn, is a closely knit component of the prevailing
world view. The power of a man does not end with death, for the
dead are so integral a part of life that differences in power of the
living are carried on into the next world. Just as among the living
individuals of royal or chiefly blood are the most powerful, so the
royal or chiefly ancestors are conceived as the most potent of all
the dead. The dead in Dahomey and among the Yoruba, at least, are
deified among the Ashanti, this remains to be studied. The relation-
;
ship between the ancestors and the gods is close, but the origin of
this collaboration is obscure and extremely difficult to establish. Evi-
23
dence adduced by Bascom indicates that at least in the Nigerian
city of Ife, the spiritual center of Yoruba religious life, the beings
conceived elsewhere as gods are there regarded as ancestors. The
sib mythologies collected in Dahomey would also seem to indicate
something of a similar order, certain sibs being considered as de-
scended from various gods, though there is no sib without its "old-
est ancestor,"who figures importantly in the daily life of each mem-
ber of the group.
The elaborateness of funeral rites in the area is cast in terms of
the role of the ancestors in the lives of their descendants, and be-
cause it is important to have the assurance of the ancestral good will,
the dead are honored with extended and costly rituals. In all this
region, in fact, the funeral is the true climax of life, and no belief
drives deeper into the traditions of West African thought. For the
problem of New World survivals this is of paramount importance,
for whatever else has been lost of aboriginal custom, the attitudes
toward the dead as manifested in meticulous rituals cast in the
mold of West African patterns have survived.
64 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
royalty had had the opportunityto profit by the high prices for the
The native pastor and the European missionary alike found a word
already in universal use, i.e., "fetish." They were possibly quite ready
to welcome a designation which obviated
any necessity for using a term
which, even when written with a small initial letter, considered they
much too good to apply to these "false gods" about whom we still
really
7O THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
souls of men who lived in the Golden Age, and those which were never
incarnate in human form, but were gods created by the Supreme God),
and branding all indiscriminately as "fetishes," and the great thinkers of
old, e.g., Plato and Socrates, as fetish worshippers. "I owe a cock to
Aesculapius," said the latter almost with his last breath, and this pious
injunction to his friend would be understood by every old Ashanti
24
today.
In so far as the complex concepts that mark the world view of the
Ashanti, the Dahomeans, and the Yoruba are given systematic ex-
pression, their religion may be analyzed into several major sub-
divisions. As has been said, the ancestral cult sanctions and stabilizes
particular tale that is called for by a given throw. This means that
the training which the diviner must have is quite comparable to
that of specialists in our own culture; the very period of study re-
they themselves recognize this fact, and will readily give an affirma-
tive answer to direct questions concerning the tradition of accept-
ing new gods or, more convincingly, will of their own volition
designate certain gods as theirs and indicate other deities they wor-
ship as adopted from outside the tribe.
This tendency to adopt new gods is to be referred to the concep-
tion of the deities as forces which function intimately in the daily
life of the people. For a supernatural power, if he is to be accepted,
must justify his existence (and merit the offerings of his wor-
shipers) by accomplishing what his devotees ask of him. He need
not be completely effective, for errors in cult practice can always be
referred to in explaining why on occasion the prayers of worshipers
are not But the gods must as a minimum care for the well-
fulfilled.
being of their people, and protect them not only from the forces of
nature but also from human enemies. If one tribe is conquered by
another, it therefore follows that the gods of the conquerors are
more powerful than those of the conquered, and all considerations
dictate that the deities of this folk be added to the less powerful gods
already worshiped. Yet this is not the entire story, for an autoch-
thonous god, if not propitiated, may still turn his considerable powers
against the conquerors and do them harm. Therefore political fer-
ment in West Africa was something correlated with religious fer-
specialists who deal in charms, but many laymen also know enough
about these matters to make charms that are entirely adequate for
a given purpose.
As has been indicated, the outstanding trait of the charm is its
specific reference. Characteristically, a charm has certain taboos
which its owner or wearer must observe lest it lose its power, while
its ownership entails certain definite prescribed actions which must
bad, white and black, desirable and undesirable that the European
is so prone to employ in responding to an equally deep-seated pat-
tern of his own manner of thinking^The African, rather, recognizes
the fact that in reality there is no absolute good and no absolute
evil, but that nothing can exert an influence for good without at the
74 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
are found the ubiquitous drum in its many forms, the gong, rat-
tles, and types of zithers and flutes. The musical bow, the sanza, or
"African piano," and other instruments that have a distribution
elsewhere on the continent are absent from the part of the west coast
with which we are at present concerned. Though only one collection
26
of songs of any size has been made in this region, the four hun-
dred and more recordings not only indicate that many different
kinds of songs are to be encountered, but that an equally wide range
of singing styles exists. If it does nothing else, indeed, this collec-
tion shows the impossibility of comprehending "African" music
under a single rubric or even of considering the songs of one tribal
group as constituting a single describable type. The significance of
this fact for the problem of New World Negro music will be probed
later in our discussion here it is sufficient to indicate the complexity
;
aspects ofmotor behavior, we can here but record the fact of its
cipal centersof this form. Not only does one encounter single three-
dimensional figures of considerable size, but also "masks," as the
representations of human and other heads worn atop the heads of
dancers are termed, bas-relief carving on doors, houseposts with
human and animal forms superimposed one on the other, objects
used in the Fate cult, and the like. In addition, however, these peo-
ple, like the Dahomeans, do ironwork of distinction, weave cloth of
cotton and raffia, and produce minor art forms in basketry, pottery,
and other media.
this time. This concerns the extent to which the cultures that have
been described those, that is, of this focal area of slaving, which
research has empirically demonstrated to have set the pattern fol-
lowed by survivals of African custom in New World Negro life
differ from or are similar to the cultures of those other portions of
West Africa which also exported large numbers of Negroes to the
United States, the Caribbean, and South America.
That our information on the peoples of the slaving belt outside
the area with which we have thus far been dealing is not as exten-
sive as that which we have to draw on from within the area is quite
true, though this does not mean that we are by any means exclu-
sively left with gleanings from the writings of those who, as mis-
sionaries or government officials or travelers or traders, had other
than scientific concerns. The scientific periodical literature makes
29
numerous contributions of high competence available. Only here
as yet can we find reports of the recent field
Nupe work among the
30
of northern Nigeria by Nadel, among Gold
the Tallensi of the
Coast by Fortes, 31 among the Dogon of the French Sudan by the
82
various field parties of the Musee de rHomme, among the Niger
33
Delta folk by Forde and Harris, or, similarly, the materials gath-
34
ered by those who have studied various Congo tribes. Some mono-
graphic literature is available. The work of the French, especially
of Labouret, on the tribes of Senegal and the interior of French
West Africa, 35 of Thomas and Westermann, 36 and of earlier Ger-
man missionaries 37 on the folk of the Liberia and Sierra Leone, and
of Tauxier on the Ivory Coast tribes (of whom the Agni are of
38
especial importance) all fall in this category. On the eastern side
"
of the focal" region, the works of Meek on the Ibo as well as on
various folk of the Nigerian hinterland 89 are to be remarked, to-
78 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
gether with the volumes by Talbot, both those derived from the
Nigerian Census of 1920 on the peoples of the forested coastal belt
and the descriptions more specifically directed toward the cultures of
40
the Niger Delta region. The earlier reports of Thomas, dealing
41
with the same area, andMansf eld's account of the tribes of the
42
Cross River region give further resources. Such German works as
43
those of Tessmann and other German writers on the Cameroons
folk can be consulted with profit in order to fill out the picture.
Deficiencies are greatest for Congo ethnography. In a general
way, the outlines of Congo custom are known, but the poor quality
of the reporting, especially the fact that except perhaps for the
44
studies published by Torday and Joyce on the Kasai river tribes
45
or by Hambly on the Ovimbundu there are no field data gathered
purely for scientific ends, places great difficulties in our way when
we search for detail. A long series of volumes was published some
years ago in Brussels as a part of an ambitious plan, devised by Cyr.
van Overbergh, 46 whereby political officers made returns on the basis
of a rigid outline, thus allowing possible direct comparisons between
the peoples reported on. Questionnaire ethnography of this type is,
antees its authority, while the fact that it was written with no
thought of the New World Negro makes its testimony as regards
findings in the Western Hemisphere the more impressive.
The discussion opens with a statement concerning the principal
those languages of South and Central Africa which had been discovered
to resemble one another so closely in structure as to constitute a singu-
larly homogeneous family. . . .
Among the most important Bantu lan-
guages are . . .
Kongo/'
From this it would seem that the apparent linguistic differences
found between the tribes of the slaving area are in reality but local
variations of a deeper-lying structural similarity. Such mutual unin-
telligibility as existed is
thus to be regarded as irrelevant to the' basic
patterns which, under contact, afforded a grammatical matrix to
communication.
facilitate
be noted that the "typical" Sudanic forms of West Africa
It is to
of our "focal" area. This means that the slaves who came from out-
side this focus spoke tongues related to those found at the center of
Efik. To the north of the forested coastal belt Sudanic dialects also
51
are spoken Mossi, Jukun, and Kanuri among others.
The Congo tribes are all Bantu speaking, and though there are
considerable differences between the Sudanic and Bantu stocks, re-
semblances also exist which, under mutual contact with Indo-Euro-
pean tongues, would loom large. The system of classifying forms
which is the primary mark of the Bantu languages could not, in any
case, be carried over into Indo-European speech, but other traits,
such as the absence of sex gender, and those "vocal images/' "ono-
matopoetic words," and "descriptive adverbs/' noted as of equal
52
importance in the Sudanic and Bantu languages could readily be
employed by English-, French-, Spanish-, and Portuguese-speaking
New World Negroes, whatever their African linguistic background.
Weneed not here document reservations to the conclusions
reached by students of Negro speech as concerns African survivals
53
in the United States. Let us but point out how the problem of
African survivals is affected by the existence of similarities and
differences in underlying pattern that characterize the tribes in all
the region where important slaving operations were carried on.
Naturally, if each tribelet was linguistically quite independent, this
would have made communication in the New World a matter of
the utmost difficulty for the slaves, who would have been far more
this, again, made it possible for men and women of different tribes
to communicate with one another as soon as they had learned a
THE AFRICAN CULTURAL HERITAGE 81
everywhere in the area, and though the line of descent varies, the
closeness of personal ties with the parent to whom one is "unre-
lated" is in accord with African custom elsewhere. It is becoming
which we are now concerned. In all West Africa, also, the rule of
western portion of the slaving belt, among the Bambara and inland
among the Wolof, kingdoms of some size had long been established
when the period of slaving began, while farther to the east the Fulani
kingdom was likewise of impressive dimensions. In Sierra Leone,
Mandingo control has long been known, but in the rest of this terri-
tory and in Liberia and the Ivory Coast small autonomous units
were the rule. Between the kingdoms of Ashanti and Dahomey nu-
merous minute independent entities existed, while the Yoruba, who
constitute a cultural unit, were divided into at least ten political
subdivisions.
As we move eastward, the size of these units becomes smaller, so
that as the Niger is reached a cluster of villages becomes the char-
acteristic self-governing form. In this region Benin alone, noted for
itspriest-kings, constitutes the exception to this rule. Large king-
doms were not numerous in the Congo, though tightly knit political
structures existed everywhere. The kingdom of Kongo, which was
looked to their "king" for direction, and everywhere his rule, and
the counsel of his elders, assured the reign of law. The "legal genius
of the African," so often mentioned in works dealing with the con-
tinent and almost entirely disregarded by students in the United
States who have attempted to describe African societies is nowhere
this fact that the most reliable testimony of the origin of New
World Negro groups derives. For despite the multitude of designa-
tions for the great numbers of gods that must have been worshiped
by the varied tribes from which came the slave population, few
deities except those from the central region have present-day devo-
tees on this side of the Atlantic. Zambi, Simbi, Bumba, Lemba,
who are worshiped in the Congo, are exceptions to this rule, but
there are few others. It is possible that greater knowledge of the
along the vast stretch from the Gambia to the Congo one finds the
techniques of iron working, cloth weaving, basketry, bead work,
silver- and goldsmithing, and calabash decorating employed in the
in so far as the picture has significance for the past of the New
World Negro. As has been indicated, the current point of view,
which emphasizes the acquiescence of the Negro to slavery, is an
integral part of the "mythology" sketched in our opening pages. As
such, it reinforces certain attitudes toward the Negro and is thus of
practical as well as scientific importance, the latter deriving prin-
cipally from the fact that this phase of the Negro past aids in under-
standing the rate and the nature of the acculturative process prior
to the abolition of slavery. Slaves who acquiesced in their status
would be more prone to accept the culture of their masters than those
who rebelled; hence, if the slaves were restless, as recent studies
have indicated, and if this restlessness caused revolt to be endemic
in the New World, then the reluctance to accept slave status might
also have encouraged the slaves to retain what they could of African
custom to a greater extent than would otherwise have been the case.
Other aspects of this historical problem also call for study. In the
analysis of a given acculturative process, it is important to know as
much as possible of the actual precontact status of the individuals
it. For though acculturation is
party to essentially an attempt to
understand the mechanisms and results of contact between the car-
86
ENSLAVEMENT AND THE REACTION TO SLAVE STATUS 87
by the ship's surgeon, whereupon the man tore out the sutures dur-
ing the night, using his fingernails since nothing else was at hand.
Ten days later he finally died of starvation, after what would today
leased, "was again taken up, and expired under the floggings given
her in consequence/'
2
A
passage written at about the same time by
Falconbridge, out of his firsthand experience with the trade, may
also be quoted here :
As very few of the negroes can so far brook the loss of their liberty,
and the hardships they endure, as to bear them with any degree of
patience, they are ever upon the watch to take advantage of the least
negligence in their oppressors. Insurrections are frequently the conse-
quence which are seldom suppressed without much bloodshed. Some-
;
times these are successful, and the whole ship's company is cut off. They
are likewise always ready to seize every opportunity for committing some
act of desperation to free themselves from their miserable state ;and
notwithstanding the restraints under which they are laid, they often
succeed. 3
It may be argued that the use of such sources must allow for
abolitionist bias. Yet other materials, written with no political pur-
pose in mind or even presented by supporters of the slave regime,
make such an argument less impressive than it would otherwise be.
The work by Captain Snelgrave, who was a believer in slavery, tells
tales of slave revolt experienced by himself or witnessed at first hand
that carry conviction even beyond the dramatic quality of the narra-
4
tive. Phillips, who was but little concerned with Negro reactions, so
negro men were usually kept shackled for the first part of the passage
until the chances of mutiny and return to Africa dwindled and the
Number of Number of
Year revolts Year revolts
1699 1733 i
1700 1735 i
1703 1737 i
1704 1747 i
1717 1750 3
1721 2 1754 I
1722 I 1759 i
1730 2 1761 2
1731 3 1764 4
1732 I
1765 2
ENSLAVEMENT AND THE REACTION TO SLAVE STATUS 89
Number of
revolts
1793 2 1829 I
1839 I
1795 *
1796 I 1845 I
itwas the discovery that the cultivation of sugar was more profitable
than gold mining that allowed the Negroes to do the agricultural
labor that was far more conducive to survival. In the United States,
again, it would seem that Indians had a lower resistance to bacterial
diseases borne by Europeans than did Negroes, which permitted the
sturdier Negroes to survive where the Indians died off. It is also
preparation for the disciplined regime of the plantation than did the
African background. 8
Whatever may have been the case as concerns the Indians, there
was no lack of protest in the New World by Negro slaves. It began
at the very earliest period of enslavement :
how faithfully the example set by the slaves who, in 1522, revolted
against their masters was followed, however undesignedly, by many
thousands of those coming after them.
Only the outstanding slave revolts outside the United States can
be indicated here, since systematic research into the problem of the
"
"Maroon, as the runaway slave can generically be termed, is for the
future. Enough is known from study of the available facts, how-
ever, to indicate the richness of the field and its potentialities in
giving us perspective on the reaction of the Negro to slavery. Over
the entire New World, in so far as is known, the earliest prolonged
moved farther into the bush. From their settlement, named Palmares,
they raided the plantations women, eventually setting up an
for
ordered society. Slaves who escaped to them were recognized as free
citizens, but those who were captured in raids continued as slaves,
since they had lacked the courage to achieve their own freedom. As
the population grew, subsidiary villages were established. At its
come upon in the literature indicate how rich this vein may prove
21
to be. Cuba, likewise, affords a fruitful field for future study. Mrs.
Frederika Bremer, a Scandinavian traveler in- the southern United
States andCuba shortly before the Civil War, gives us one of the
few contemporary descriptions of slavery in that island. She tells of
the many difficulties she encountered in obtaining permission to wit-
ENSLAVEMENT AND THE REACTION TO SLAVE STATUS 95
The slave disturbances of 1846 are still fresh in the minds of people,
and they originated in this part of the island. These disturbances, which
gave rise to such cruel proceedings on the part of the Spanish govern-
ment have also caused severe restrictions to be laid upon the occupations
and amusements of the free negroes. Formerly, it is said, might be heard
every evening and night, both afar and near, the joyous sound of the
African drum, as it was beaten at the negro dances. When, however, it
was discovered that these dancing assemblies had been made use of for
the organization of the disturbances which afterward took place, their
22
liberty became very much circumscribed.
When the negroes become accustomed to the labor and life of the
plantation, it seems to agree with them but during the first years, when
;
they are brought here free and wild from Africa, it is very hard to them,
and many seek to free themselves from slavery by suicide. This is fre-
quently the case among the Luccomees, who appear to be among the
noblest tribes of Africa, and it is not long since eleven Luccomees were
found hanging from the branches of a guasima tree. They had
. . .
each one bound his breakfast in a girdle around him; for the African
believes that such as die here immediately rise again to new life in their
native land. Many female slaves, therefore, will lay upon the corpse of
the self -murdered the kerchief, or the head-gear, which she most ad-
mires, in the belief that it will thus be conveyed to those who are dear
to her in the mother-country, and will bear them a salutation from her.
The corpse of a suicide-slave has been seen covered with hundreds of
such tokens. 23
The reaction of the slaves to slavery in the United States has been
ideas concerning slavery that are treated are those of pro- and anti-
Nor was the fear of property loss the only or the greatest of Southern
apprehensions. One of the strongest points in Southern culture was its
acquaintance with the elements of classical literature. To them the his-
tory of the servile wars in Rome was a familiar topic.
Nor was it ancient
history alone which alarmed them. Fresh in their memory were the
horrors of the Negro revolution in Haiti. Toussaint L'Ouverture, who
to Wendell Phillips was an apostle of liberty, was to them a demon of
cruelty. How far the Negroes who surrounded them, who cooked their
food and nursed their children, had been affected by civilization, and
how far they retained the primitive savagery they were presumed to
have brought from Africa, they did not learn until the Civil War. 26
The first settlement within the present borders of the United States
to contain Negro slaves was the victim of the first slave revolt. A
Spanish
colonizer,Lucas Vasquez de Ayllon, in the summer of 1526, founded a
town near the mouth of the Petlee river in what is now South Carolina.
The community consisted of five hundred Spaniards and one hundred
Negro slaves. Trouble soon beset the colony. Illness caused numerous
deaths, carrying off, in October, Ayllon himself. The Indians grew more
hostile and dangerous. Finally, probably in November, the slaves re-
belled, killed several of their masters, and escaped to the Indians. This
was a fatal blow and the remaining colonists but one hundred and fifty
souls returned to Haiti in December, I526. 29
This was but an eddy in the main current of American history, but
it was a portent of things to come. Six uprisings in continental
United States are listed by this author for the period between 1663
and 1 700, fifty during the eighteenth century, and fifty-three be-
tween 1800 and i864. 30
Wish has described, with rich documentation, the panic that swept
over the South in 1856:
Fear was translated into action in various sections as, for ex-
ample, in the organization of special vigilante bands in Texas as
one discovery followed another. In Tennessee and Kentucky actual
plots were exposed, Missouri and Arkansas reported projected up-
risings, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, and Virginia ex-
perienced an increase in slave repression, while the demand grew for
the enslavement of the free Negroes to wipe out a possible focus of
infection. The situation is thus summarized :
porary press that the year 1856 was exceptional for the large crop of
individual slave crimes reported, especially those directed against the
life of the master. This fact would
suggest a fair amount of reality
behind the accounts of slave discontent and plotting. The deep-seated
feeling of insecurity characterizing the slaveholder's society evoked such
mob reactions as those noted in the accounts of insurrections, imaginary
and otherwise, upon any suspicion of Negro insubordination. The South,
attributing the slave plots to the inspiration of Northern abolitionists,
found an additional reason for the desirability of secession; while the
abolitionist element of the North, crediting in full the reports of slave
outbreaks, was more convinced than ever that the institution of slavery'
32
represented a moral leprosy.
ing all 'the southern states, and those northern ones as well during
the period they sanctioned slavery. It was more than the sporadic
and insignificant phenomenon it is sometimes dismissed as having
been in passages like the following :
Small most of the revolts were, yet in their aggregate and persistence
35
over the entire period of slaving they give point to the comments
made by a recent Netherlands observer of the interracial situation
in America, that today one of the keys to an understanding of the
36
South is the fear of the Negro, a legacy of slavery.
they put to such tasks is remarked on again and again. The com-
ment of one slaveowner to Olmsted, "If I could get such hired men
as you can in New York, I'd never have another nigger on my
37
place," indicates sufficiently how great was the problem of forcing
an unwilling worker to perform his stint.
Olmsted's works may be quoted further for other examples of
ioo THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
avoid observing and I certainly took no pains to do so, nor were any
special facilities afforded me to do it repeated instances of waste and
misapplication of labor which it can never be possible to guard against,
when the agents of industry are slaves. Many such evidences of waste
itwould not be easy to specify and others, which remain in my memory
;
after some weeks, do not adequately account for the general impression
that .all I saw gave me; but there were, for instance, under my observa-
tion, gates left open and bars left down, against standing orders; rails
ENSLAVEMENT AND THE REACTION TO SLAVE STATUS 101
entrusted to them, making statements which their owner was obliged to,
receive as sufficient excuse, though, he told us, he felt assured they were
false all going to show habitual carelessness, indolence, and mere eye-
40
service.
engaged, when he
will return to his owner who, glad to find his property
to punish him, and immediately sends him for another year to a new
master. 41
The overseer rode among them, on a horse, carrying in his hand a raw-
hide whip, constantly directing and encouraging them but, as my com- ;
vent. All thearguments which can be derived against it are used to deter
negroes from the perpetuation of it and such as take this dreadful
means of freeing themselves from their miseries, are always branded
in reputation after death, as the worst of criminals, and their bodies are
not allowed the small portion of Christian rites which are awarded to
the corpses of other slaves. 45
one of the most important slave revolts, was almost a victim of his
mother's frantic refusal to bring another slave into the world. Her-
self African born, she is said "to have been so wild that at Nat's
46
birth she had to be tied to prevent her from murdering him." Bas-
sett speaks of the task of the overseer "to see that the women were
taken care of that childbirth might be attended by no serious mis-
hap." He continues:
One commentary
is found in the reports of the operations of the
. . . These negroes belong to a widow lady and constitute all the prop-
erty she has on earth. They have both been raised with the greatest
indulgence. Had it been otherwise, they would never have had an op-
portunity to escape, as they have done. Their flight has left her penni-
less. Either of them would have readily sold for $1200; and Mr. Toler
advised their owner to sell them at the commencement of the year, prob-
ably anticipating the very thing that has happened. She refused to do so,
because she felt too much attachment to them. They have made a fine
51
return, truly.
Knowing how to read and write, James was able from Canada to
answer a letter from his late owner asking that he return to save her
from the distress and financial embarrassment his escape had caused
her:
plan by which his wife might be run off from Richmond, which would
be the cause of her owner (Henry W. Quarles, Esq.) losing at least one
thousand dollars. 52
It will probably never be known how many slaves did make good
their escape; that protest continued to the very end of the period is
shown by recent historical studies into the behavior of the slaves
53
during the Civil War. It is widely held that most slaves refused to
desert their masters and mistresses, preferring to remain with their
"white folks" rather than risk the life of free men. Not only in the
Sea Islands, where the Negroes were first liberated, did they refuse
54
toaccompany their masters fleeing from the northern troops, but
elsewhere slaves helped the Union troops wherever possible, as either
ENSLAVEMENT AND THE REACTION TO SLAVE STATUS 105
ready prey to the slaver. There is evidence to prove that some repre-
sentatives of the upper socio-economic strata of African societies,
at least, were sold into slavery; and there is some reason to believe
that certain of these men
or their descendants, such as Christophe,
became leaders in the organized slave revolts of the New World.
Mrs. Bremer gives an instance of a slave of noble African blood:
Many of the slaves, also, who are brought to Cuba have been princes
and chiefs of their tribes, and such of their race as have accompanied
them into slavery on the plantations always show them respect and
obedience. A very young man, a prince of the Luccomees, with several
of his nation, was taken to a plantation on which, from some cause or
other, he was condemned to be flogged, and the others, as is customary
in such cases, to witness the punishment. When the young prince laid
himself down on the ground to receive the lashes, his attendants did
same 55
the likewise, requesting to be allowed to share his punishment.
io6 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
The Mina Negroes have even been seen to recognize princes of their
country .
prostrating
. . themselves at their feet and rendering them
that homage whose contrast to the state of servitude to which these
princes have been reduced in the colony offers a striking enough in-
stance of the instability of human greatness. 56
Field work in West Africa has made available some further in-
formation regarding the inclusion of upper-class persons in the slave
cargoes. These data come entirely from Dahomey no comparable
materials have been collected elsewhere so that any generalizations
drawn from them must be made with all reservations. Yet the fact
that in this instance traditional history is so specific might indicate
that the mechanisms involved were more widely operative in West
Africa than the facts previously in hand suggest.
Tradition has it that, in Dahomey, considerable numbers of per-
sons were enslaved as a result of dynastic quarrels. When a new
king was to ascend a throne, his right to the kingship was some-
times disputed by a brother, the son of a different wife of their
common father. If revolt broke out, whatever the result, the winner
had at hand the slave market to dispose of his rival. This not only
meant that the unsuccessful contender was safely and profitably
disposed of, but that his family and supporting chiefs, his diviners
and the "priests who had advised and aided him were also enslaved.
The extent to which this account represents an exaggeration of oral
tradition must not be lost sight of; it is well known that one of
the Dahomean kings, Glele, was for many years held prisoner under
the regency of an uncle, who sold the queen mother into slavery,
and probably others of the royal compound. It is an historical fact
that Da Souza, the Portuguese mulatto confidant of Glele, after his
friend had regained his throne, traveled to Brazil to find and bring
back the deported mother of the king. Tradition says he was suc-
cessful; history says the mission failed.
This tradition concerning dynastic disputes would account for
members of the Dahomean nobility being slaved; a further tradition
tells the circumstances under which priests of the native cults were
sold away in considerable numbers. The explanation of this fact is
likewise political, though intertribal rather than intratribal differ-
ences are involved. Local priests, especially those of the river cults,
are held to have been the most intransigeaht among the folk whom
ENSLAVEMENT AND THE REACTION TO SLAVE STATUS 107
As for the Manner how those People become Slaves it may be re- ;
is so to this day, for them to make Slaves of all the Captives they take
in war. they had an Opportunity of selling them to the
Now, before
white People, they were often obliged to kill great Multitudes, when
they had taken more than they could well employ on their own Planta-
tions, for fear that they should rebel, and endanger their Masters safety.
2dly. Most Crimes amongst them are punished by Mulcts and Fines ;
and if the Offender has not the wherewithal to pay his Fine, he is sold
for a Slave This is the practice of the inland People, as well as of those
:
And if they are not able or willing to do it, then they are generally sold
for the benefit of their Creditors. But few of these come into the hands
of the Europeans, being kept by their Countrymen ff)r their own use.
4thly. I have been told, That it is common for some inland People, to
Children for Slaves, tho' they are under no Necessity for so
sell their
I have good reason to believe, that of one hundred and twenty negroes,
which were purchased for the ship to which I then belonged, then lying
at the river Ambris, by far the greater part, if not the whole, were
In West African
wars, no persons were considered noncombatants ;
The hypothesis that the selective character of the slave trade oper-
ated to bring the least desirable elements of Africa to the New World
is thus neither validated by the reports of those who wrote during
the days of the trade nor by the traditions of slaving held in the area
where it was most intensive. That debtors were enslaved means
nothing in terms of selectivity for, as was the case with white
debtors, deportation merely acted to rid a country of persons lacking
financial responsibility. Criminals likewise constituted a class deter-
mined by arbitrary definition, set up here as in every culture; it is
to be doubted whether in West Africa, any more than in Europe,
an inherent tendency to depravity can be ascribed to those who were
deported because of their crimes. All agree, moreover, that debtors
and criminals were but a small proportion of the cargoes of the slav-
ing vessels, which means that the dominant factors were nonselec-
tive warfare and kidnaping. And though it may be maintained
that those Africans who were most able escaped in warfare, this
point would be highly difficult to establish; while it would be even
more difficult to prove that those kidnaped were possessed of any
particular incapacity.
Chapter V
THE ACCULTURATIVE PROCESS
today.
What caused the differences between the several parts of the New
World in retention of African custom? Though the answer can
only be sketched, especially since adequate historical analysis of the
data concerning plantation life outside continental North America
and Brazil is quite lacking, yet the effective factors are discernible.
They were four in number climate and topography the organiza-
: ;
open country could never have afforded him. In the tropics, dense
jungles aided revolters, both because of the similarity between the
conditions of life the runaways had to meet in these forests and
the setting of their lives in Africa and because of the difficulties
open country could never have afforded him. In the tropics, dense
jungles aided revolters, both because of the similarity between the
conditions of life the runaways had to meet in these forests and
the setting of their lives in Africa and because of the difficulties
for exposure to new modes of life that determine the type and in-
tensity of the syncretisms which constitute the eventual patternings
of the resulting cultural orientations. That racial ratios varied greatly
in various parts of the New World must be taken into account; even
in the United States the differences in the numbers of whites and
Negroes from one portion of the slave belt to another were so strik-
ing that they attracted the attention of contemporary observers no
less than of present-day students.
The planters, that is the owners of large farms, were but a small part
of the white people of the old South. The great mass were small farmers,
owners of small groups of slaves or of none at all, men who had land
and lived independently without leisure, education, or more than simple
comforts. ... It was from this class of small farmer that the overseer
came. He wasoften a man whose father had a few slaves, or some am-
bitiousfarmer youth who had set his eyes upon becoming a planter and
began to "manage," as the term was, a stepping-stone to proprietorship
in the end. 5
the rule. Over certain zones, as most of North Carolina and Georgia,
there were few big places. Page justly affirms that the average Southern
estate was small, and few Southerners owned negroes, that most of these
6
possessed but a small number.
had been imported in the ten months past. Two years later, came word
that the negroes were increasing. The Public Record Office in London
had a list of the "Christian'* men, women and children and also of negro
slaves, in Maryland, in 1712. The whites numbered nearly thirty-eight
thousand, the negroes over eight thousand. In three of the Southern
counties, the blacks far outnumbered the whites. In the years following,
both races increased fast, but the blacks faster than the whites. By 1750,
the whites may have been nearly a hundred thousand, the blacks nearly
forty thousand. In 1790, there were over two hundred and eighty thou-
sand whites, and nearly half as many slaves the eight thousand and odd
;
free blacks making the proportion of white to black as less than two
7
to one.
parents had learned from the few whites with whom they came in
8
contact.
"two well-known classes." One class owned slaves who were "ragged,
filthy, and thievish" the other, slaves who were well clothed, fed, and
;
10
housed, cheerful, industrious, arid contented.
n8 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
11
total in 1860, who owned no slaves.
regions :
... the ratios among the slaveholdings of the several scales, according
to the United States census of 1790, were almost identical with those
just noted in the selected Virginia counties. ... In all these Virginia
and Maryland counties the average holding ranged between 8.5 and 13
slaves. In the other districts in both commonwealths, where the planta-
tion system was not so dominant, the average slaveholding was smaller,
of course, and the non-slaveholders more abounding. 15
very generally that in this part of Georgia they appear under a great
disadvantage. In St. Simon's island, it is admitted, that the negroes on
the smaller estates are more civilized than on the larger properties, be-
cause they associate with a greater proportion of whites. In Glynn
County, where we are now residing, there are no less than 4,000 negroes
to 700 whites; whereas in Georgia generally there are only 281,000
slaves in a population of 691,000, or more whites than colored people.
Throughout the upper country there is a large preponderance of Anglo-
Saxons, and a little reflection will satisfy the reader how much the edu-
cation of a race which starts originally from so low a stage of intellectual,
social, moral and spiritual development, as the African negro, must de-
pend not on learning to read and write, but on the amount of familiar
intercourse which they enjoy with individuals of a more advanced race.
So long as they herd together in large gangs, and rarely come into con-
tact with any whites save their owner and overseer, they can profit little
by their imitative faculty, and can not even make much progress in
17
mastering the English language. . . ,
ally had over two families to each slave. The average number of slaves
per plantation for the state was 4.5. However, in the cotton counties the
large plantations set the prevailing patterns. In 1805 there were 790
owners of from 30 to 70 slaves 550 owners with from 70 to 100 slaves;
;
312 with from 100 to 200; 24 with from 200 to 300 and 10 with from
300 to 500. Thus, some 150,000 slaves were on plantations of 50 or
more even though only a third of the white people were directly inter-
ested in slavery. 18
I2O THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
very fact that the negroes were slaves linked them as a whole more
closely to the whites than any scheme of wage-labor could well have
done. 19
Have pity for an existence which must be eked out far from the world
of ourown people. We here number five whites, my father, my mother,
my two brothers, and myself, surrounded by more than two hundred
slaves, tbe number of our negroes who are domestics alone coming al-
most to thirty. From morning to night, wherever we turn, their faces
meet our eyes. No matter bow early we awaken, they are at our bed-
sides, and the custom which obtains here not to make the least move
without the help of one of these negro servants brings it about not
only that we live in their society the greater portion of the day, but
also that they are involved in the least important events of our daily
life. Should we go outside our house to the workshops, we are still
subject to this strange propinquity. Add to this the fact that our con-
versation has almost entirely to do with the health of our slaves, their
needs which must be cared for, the manner in which they are to be
distributed about the estate, and their attempts to revolt, and you will
come to understand that our entire life is so closely identified with that
of these unfortunates that, in the end, it is the same as theirs. And
despite whatever pleasure may come from that almost absolute domi-
nance which it is given us to exercise over them, what regrets do not
assail us daily because of our inability to have contact and correspond-
ence with others than these unfortunates, so far removed from us in
20
point of view, customs, and education.
neglected, would come into play. Where the more dramatic African
survivals, such as possession dances and other manifestations of
religious belief and of magic, are concerned, it is essential that
enough wealth be at hand to allow adequate support for the special-
ists who direct these rites and control the supernatural powers. This
beliefs, because in these outlying districts there are not enough per-
sons or enough wealth to support the extensive ceremonies. Anal-
ogous is the case of the "shouting" churches of the United States,
THE ACCULTURATIVE PROCESS 125
where the forms of spirit possession represent one of the most direct
African carry-overs to be encountered in this country. Though
churches of this kind are numerous in the South, if one wishes to
hear the "hottest" preaching and to witness the greatest outbursts
of hysteria one must go to such great Negro centers as New York
or Chicago or Detroit. Good preachers are in demand and, in ac-
cordance with the economic pattern of our culture, they accept calls
where their services can be most adequately compensated. In the
South, by and large, except the most populous Negro communities,
congregations cannot meet the terms offered by the richer churches
of the North.
It is thus unjustifiable to make the assumption that mere contact,
... fortwo generations the negroes were few, they were employed
alongside the white servants, and in many cases were members of their
masters' households. They had by far the best opportunity which any
of their race had been given in America to learn the white man's ways
and to adjust the lines of their bondage in as pleasant places as possible.
THE ACCULTURATIVE PROCESS 127
Their importation was, for the time, on but an experimental scale, and
even their legal status was during the early decades indefinite. 25
The purposes and policies of the masters were fairly uniform, and in
consequence the negroes, though with many variants, became largely
standardized into the predominant plantation type. The traits which pre-
vailed were an eagerness for society, music and merriment, a fondness
for display whether of person, dress, vocabulary or emotion, a not
flagrant sensuality, a receptiveness toward any religion whose exercises
were exhilarating, a proneness to superstition, a courteous acceptance of
subordination, an avidity for praise, a readiness for loyalty of a feudal
sort, and last but not least, a healthy human repugnance toward over-
work. 26
Lyell did not find any great differences between the manner of
life of slaves employed at various tasks on the larger plantations:
The out-door laborers have separate houses provided for them even ;
the domestic servants, except a few who are nurses to the white chil-
dren, live apart from the great house an arrangement not always con-
venient for the masters, as there is no one to answer the bell after a
certain hour. 27
Burleigh servants carried her point over the heads of the white family.
After the mistress had passed away, Alcey resolved that she would not
cook any more, and she took her own way of getting assigned to field
work. She systematically disobeyed orders and stole or destroyed the
greater part of the provisions given to her for the table. No special
notice was taken, so she resolved to show more plainly that she was tired
of the kitchen. Instead of getting the chickens for the dinner from the
coop, as usual, she unearthed from some corner an old hen that had been
setting for six weeks, and served her up as fricassee had company ! We
to dinner that day that would have deterred most of the servants, but
;
not Alcey. She achieved her object, for she was sent to the field the next
28
day. . . ,
Nor were mulatto offspring of the masters always given the favored
treatment envisaged for them as members of the household:
One might imagine, that the children of such connections, would fare
128 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
better, in the hands of their masters, than other slaves. The rule is
quite the other way and a very little reflection will satisfy the reader
;
holding woman hates, she wants not means to give that hate telling ef-
fect. . . . Masters are frequently compelled to sell this class of their
slaves, out of deference to the feelings of their white wives; ... it is
reeds kept rule over these poor little black lambs, who with an un-
mistakable expression of fear and horror shrunk back in crowds when-
ever the threatening witches came forth flourishing their rods. On
smaller plantations, where the number of children is smaller, and the
female guardians gentle, the scene, of course, is not so repulsive; never-
theless it always reminded me of a flock of sheep or swine, which were
fed merely to make them ready for eating. 31
obtained over the entire slaving area of the United States, this un-
doubtedly was true in many cases ; yet the passages cited in preced-
ing pages would seem to indicate that such differentiation was far
from universal.
The number of estates that could support a trained retinue of
house servants was relatively small, and it is thus likely, as Johnson
indicates, that on the majority of those plantations where the
Negroes were employed at housework, those too old or too young
to work in the fields, or incapacitated for some other reason, were
assigned to the task. And this being the case, it would not be sur-
prising if the following description of table service in Jamaica was
not closer in many cases to the North American reality than the tra-
ditional liveried retainers and turbaned maids and cooks of the
fabled "great house" :
... it is very common to see black boys and girls, twelve or thirteen
years of age, almost men and women, in nothing but a long shirt or shift,
waiting at table; so little are the decencies of life observed toward
them. 32
In one family, I found that there were six white children and six
blacks, of about the same age, and the negroes had been taught to read
by their companions, the owner winking at this illegal proceeding, and
seeming to think that such an acquisition would rather enhance the value
130 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
Side by side in the field, the white servant and the slave were en-
gaged in planting, weeding, suckering, or cutting tobacco, or sat side by
side in the barn manipulating the leaf in the course of preparing it for
market, or plied their axes to the same trees in clearing away the forests
to extend the new grounds. The same holidays were allowed to both,
and doubtless, too, the same privilege of cultivating small patches of
35
ground for their own private benefit.
customarily recognized :
and they occupy all the responsible posts. The white hands are
. . .
content, he said, after some hesitation, that he had rather live where he
could be more free a ; man had to be too "discreet" here. Not long . . .
since, ayoung English fellow came to the pit, and was put to work along
with a gang of negroes. One morning, about a week afterwards, twenty
or thirty men called on him, and told him that they would allow him
fifteen minutes to get out of sight, and if they ever saw him in those
1
parts again, the> would "give him hell/ "But what had he done?"
. . .
"Why, believe they thought he had been too free with the niggers; he
I
wasn't used to them, you see, sir, and he talked to 'em free like, and
they thought he'd make 'em think too much of themselves." 36
The more common sort of habitations of the white people are either
of logs or loosely-boarded frame, a brick chimney running up outside,
at one end everything very slovenly and dirty about them. Swine, fox-
;
hounds, and black and white children, are commonly lying very promis-
cuously together, on the ground about the doors. I am struck with the
close co-habitation and association of black and white negro women are
carrying black and white babies together in their arms black and white ;
children are playing together (not going to school together) black and ;
white faces constantly thrust together out of doors to see the train
37
go by.
In the preceding excerpts, the situations in the United States
where contact between whites and Negroes occurred have been indi-
cated, especially as regards the way in which differences in oppor-
tunity to cope with European custom made for differences in rapid-
ity of acculturation and the absorption of these new habits in
customary behavior. We have also been concerned to discover to
what extent the opportunities to learn and imitate white behavior
were different for differing categories of slaves, or were spread
evenly over the Negro population as a whole. This leaves us with
a third point to be considered those mechanisms which, in the case
of Negroes most exposed to white contact, permitted them to retain
Africanisms.
As with the other points raised, the data are scanty and scattered,
and intensive research will be needed before such a question can be
answered in any adequate measure. Nonetheless, hints in the litera-
ture amply justify asking the question here. It customarily as-
is
Planters learned early in the use of slave labor that it was necessary
to give certain trusted Negroes limited authority over the others so that
with a change of overseers the plantation routine might be disturbed as
little as possible. On the large plantations the seasoned Negroes trained
the new ones and were responsible for their behavior. In the early days
of the plantation regime, when a gang of fresh Africans were pur-
chased, they were assigned in groups to certain reliable slaves who initi-
ated them into the ways of the plantation. These drivers, as they were
called, had the right of issuing or withholding rations to the raw re-
cruits and of minor punishments. They taught the new slaves
inflicting
to speak the broken English which they knew and to do the plantation
work which required little skill. ... At the end of a year, the master or
overseer for the first time directed the work of the new Negro who now
had become "tamed," assigning him to a special task of plantation work
along with the other seasoned hands who had long since learned to obey
orders, to arise when the conch blew at ''day clean," to handle a hoe in
38
listing and banking, to stand still when a white man spoke.
ing and the telling of folk stories, while African patterns envisaged
in the terms "morality," "etiquette," and "discretion" may also have
been discussed enough to act as a brake on too rapid or too complete
an adoption of white values.
THE ACCULTURATIVE PROCESS 133
This would mean, then, that not only field hands, but all slaves
were exposed to forces making for the retention of Africanisms.
House servants had contact with newly arrived Africans when such
persons were employed as helpers in the kitchens of the great house,
or, as an actual instance recounted in the Sea Islands had it, when
89
such persons were themselves in an emergency put to cooking. JThat
to assume a continuous process of mutual influence between Negroes
born m this countryjancT those freshly arrived from Africa, in all
aspects of belief and behavior, Is~hbt unreasonable is further indi-
;
The "swonga" people were the drivers who took their orders directly
from the overseer, the house servants who were intimately associated
with the master's and overseer's families, the mechanics who were per-
mitted to hire their own time from their masters and work in Beaufort
or Charleston. To this group also belonged any among them who from
superior rank or intelligence acted as their official or self-appointed
leaders. The religious leaders and the plantation watchmen were usually
"swonga" Negroes, as were also the witch doctors and those who could
boast of physical prowess. 40
togo into
swamps or uncleared forests to gather wood or trap pos-
sum and other game. In the latter category fall such festivities as
those at Christmas, a holiday whose celebration on some plantations
and in some regions extended into the New Year. These occasions
were marked by songs and dances and games and tales, many of
which, being African in character, were thus passed on from one
generation to the next. These gatherings also afforded unusually
good opportunities for other African cultural elements, such as
world view and magical practices, to be learned and thus kept living.
One aspect of Negro experience in the United States that is sig-
nificant in the total acculturative situation concerns the results of
possible.
If, then, the acculturative situation be analyzed in terms of differ-
the African manner. Magic was almost by its very nature adapted
to "going underground/* and was the natural prop of revolt, as the
following passage shows :
causes, not the least of which was economic. Slaves were bought to
be worked, and the leisure essential to the production of plastic
art forms was entirely denied them. Furthermore, there was little
if any demand for what might have been carved, since European
New World, and there alone, we do not know, but the special cir-
cumstances under which Yoruban carving survived in Brazil, should
these ever be discovered, will throw light on why similar survivals
are not found elsewhere.
Institutions in the field of social organization stand intermediate
between technology and religion in respect to retention in the face
of slavery. It goes without saying that the plantation system ren-
dered the survival of African family types impossible, as it did
their underlying moral and supernatural sanctions, except in dilute
form. Only where Negroes escaped soon enough after the beginning
of their enslavement, and retained their freedom for sufficiently long
periods, could institutions of larger scone such as the extended
family or the clan persist at all and even in these situations the mere
;
European influence should not be felt. In Dutch Guiana alone has the
clan persisted; what forms the social structures of present-day Negro
communities of Brazil take is unknown, but in Haiti and Jamaica
larger groupings go no further than a kind of loosely knit extended
family. Yet, on the other hand, slavery by no means completely sup-
pressed rough approximations of certain forms of African family
life. Even in the United States, where Africanisms persisted with
turbed matings have not been lost sight of in the appeal of the more
dramatic separations that actually did occur in large numbers. As
will be indicated in the next chapter, certain obligations of parents
to children operative in Africa no less than in the European scene
were carried over with all the drives of their emotional content in-
tact. The special kind of relationship between husband and wife
areas where contact with European patterns was closest. It was but
natural that all these elements of attitude, belief, and point of view
concerning the ties of kinship should have been passed on as chil-
dren were taught by their parents; to have been inculcated, more-
over, without undue interference by the masters as long as they led
to no action that would impede the smooth functioning of the estates.
The
traditions underlying nonrelationship groupings of various
kinds likewise survived the slave regime. The degree to which this
is true varied with the function of a given organization, approach-
ing the impossible in the case of those secret societies so widely
spread in the parts of Africa from which the slaves were drawn. In
the latter instance, this sort of organization could only go under-
ground or disappear, but for other kinds of associations such drastic
action was not necessary. The spirit behind the numerous types of
cooperative societies of Africa tended to be kept alive by the very
form of group labor employed on the plantations. The feeling for
mutual helpfulness inherent in this tradition contributed directly
toward the adjustment of the African to his new situation, for with-
out some formula of mutual self-help he could scarcely have sup-
ported the oppression he suffered. And how strongly this formula
did persist is indicated by the manner in which, on emancipation,
cooperative organizations sprang up immediately in the Sea Islands,
or how in the West Indies insurance organizations, of the kind com-
mon in Africa, at once came into being. The great number of Negro
lodges in the United States, though outwardly following conven-
tional white patterns, are by no means the same as their white coun-
among the slaves, certainly of the United States, came more and
more to be based on white values. Where contact was less imme-
diate less constant, as was the case in the Caribbean, the iden-
and
tificationof these values with the traditions of the masters was not
so strong, while in this area there were those who could function
effectively in terms of African ways of life and could thus retain
prestige in terms of these capacities in a manner not possible on the
continent. The worker of magic, the wise old woman, the man whose
personality made him a leader in cooperative effort or in successful
revolt thus retained a hold on the people such as was impossible
where the impact of European custom was such as to inhibit these
individuals from employing African methods of coping with their
problems.
This brings us to a final point in considering the forces that
caused the differentials in Africanisms existing today in the various
aspects of New World Negro culture in any given region the effect
of that resilience toward new experience which in itself is a deep-
seated tradition of Africa. It has already been indicated how, in
West Africa, it was common for both conquerors and conquered to
take over one another's gods and how, in the course of a man's
everyday experience, it was deemed more advantageous for him to
give way to a point of view against which he could not prevail than
to persist in his attitude, however firmly he might hold an opinion.
This tradition underlies the soft-spoken politeness for which the
Negro is famous, which, in the form of a code far more elaborated
142 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
in Africa and among New World Negroes than it ever was in Euro-
pean or in the behavior of whites in the Western Hemisphere,
life
characterizes the relationships between Negroes quite as much as it
-des-the behavior of Negroes toward whites. This tradition likewise
gives historic validity to the circumspectness that has so often been
interpreted by students of Negroes in the United States as a mere
reflection of an accommodation to slavery that persisted because of
the disadvantaged social and economic position of the Negro since
emancipation. Yet we have seen how deeply rooted is this circum-
spection in Africa itself, and how it is found among Negroes in
every part of the New World. Though undoubtedly reinforced by
the exigencies of slavery, it is thus nonetheless to be considered the
carry-over of an older pattern, rather than merely something which
afforded a means to adjust to the difficulties of life where freedom
of personal decision was not permitted.
Certain striking instances that document this tradition of pliability
can be traced in the religious life of Negroes in those parts of the
New World where, Catholicism being the official religion, numerous
Negroes are members of the church while at the same time they con-
tinue African modes of worship. What seem to be far-reaching
contradictions are reconciled without apparent difficulty, for the
pagan spirit believed to control a given manifestation of the universe
is merely identified with a given saint, and unless missionary pressure
places the African spirit under a ban and removes the prestige it
would normally receive as a functioning entity, no demoralization
results. The fate of African percussion instruments offers another
has not been considered necessary to employ any but the more com-
prehensive sources. Puckett's standard work on Negro folk customs,
which, despite the emphasis on European provenience laid in its
opening and concluding chapters, is filled with materials that point
directly to Africa, is one such work. C. S. Johnson's study of the
Negro rural population of Macon County, Georgia, and the reports
on a small-town Negro group by Powdermaker and Dollard also
have been found useful. For the kinship units in Negro social or-
ganization, Frazier's volume has been utilized, as have the works of
Parsons and G. B. Johnson. Finally, the files of such periodicals as
the Journal of American Folk-Lore and certain literary studies of
southern Negro life which have been found to contain significant
sociological and ethnographic materials complete this list of the
kinds of sources primarily called on to supply our data.
A most serious handicap is the absence of adequate field reports
based on a combined historical, demographic, and comparative eth-
nographic attack. Field work by Powdermaker, conceived in the
broadest manner of any single study of a Negro group in the United
States, suffers from lack of acquaintance with data from Negro
societies in other parts of the New World and Africa. Interpreta-
tions in this work
are therefore often speculative where they might
be subject to historical control; more regrettable is the fact that
some of the critical materials which would have given greater in-
sight into the life of thisgroup have been overlooked. The psycho-
logical preoccupations of Dollard in studying the same community
have conditioned the frame of reference employed in gathering his
data, and also frequently tend to becloud his interpretations. More-
over, the same criticism, on a somewhat different level, may be
lodged against the results of most sociological research in this field,
AFRICANISMS IN SECULAR LIFE 145
of the Kwaside rites for the ancestors of the chief of the Ashanti
village of Asokore, which include a perfect example of the Charles-
ton, or by the resemblance to other styles of Negro dancing well
known in this country included in films taken in Dahomey and
among the Yoruba.
In another less well-known field, it may be indicated that the
precise method of planting photographed in Dahomey and in Haiti
was observed by Bascom in the Gulla Islands in the summer of
2
J 939- This method, already described and illustrated for these other
two regions, 3 is to work down and back each pair of rows in a field.
A container of seed is held under the left arm, and the right or left
heel, as the case may be, is used to make a shallow depression in the
soil. The seeds are dropped in this hole, and dirt to cover them
pushed over it with the toes; this foot is then placed ahead of the
sower, and the same movements performed in the opposite row with
the other foot. Whether this method is used elsewhere in the United
States cannot be stated, but where it does occur it constitutes a direct
survival of a West African motor habit.
The description given of a Sea Island woman of the Civil War
period may be cited as another instance of the survival of motor
behavior :
It was not an unusual thing to meet a woman coming from the field,
where she had been hoeing cotton, with a small bucket or cup on her
head, and a hoe over her shoulder, contentedly smoking a pipe and
briskly knitting as she strode along. I have seen, added to all these, a
4
baby strapped to her back.
extent it has survived in the United States cannot be said, but that
the practice has had an important influence on walking style is ap-
parent. Whether or not it is the factor that has given the Negro
his distinctive walk is for future research to determine, but the point
must be kept mind
as at least a somewhat more tenable hypothesis
in
than that advanced by one Freudian disciple, who held the Negro
"slouch" to be the manifestation of a castration complex The ways !
and pestle elsewhere in the South has not been reported. Mortars
and pestles of the type included in the collection from the Sea Islands
at Northwestern University and woven trays used in winnowing the
6
rice are entirely African. Their use to shell cereals of one kind and
another is ubiquitous throughout Africa, though of course not con-
fined to that continent. The way in which these are used, however,
shows a further retention of motor habit, especially in the tendency
to work as rhythmically as possible in the West Indies, Guiana, and
;
coiffures and by the "Hair Dresser" signs on many a lowly Negro cabin ;
although there is a decided tendency to remove the kink, by odoriferous
7
unguents of all kinds in imitation of the straight hair of the whites.
Yet a statement of this kind is of but little help, for in many parts of
the world men and women take pains in dressing their hair. That
Negroes have many methods of hair straightening is well known;
but this is decidedly not African, for nothing of the sort has been
of that country men as well as women part and braid their hair in
this fashion. This, however, is a local elaboration, since in West
Africa and the rest of the New World men customarily cut the hair
close and wear it
unparted, in the manner to be seen among the rural
Negroes in this country.
There was nothing Aunt Mymee desired less than a "head -handker-
chief/' as she wore her hair (except on Sundays, when it was carded
out in a great black fleece), in little wads the length and thickness of her
9
finger, each wad being tightly wrapped with white cord.
Before I had gone far I discovered that as I had begun to make calls,
I must not omit one house, nor fail to speak to a single person, from the
oldest grandparent to the youngest child. Their social rights were in-
exorable. My guide said, "All them people waits to say how d'ye to you,"
so I went on. 12
If you would take your stand near the spring where they come down
after pitchers of water you would witness practical politeness. The
courtesy of Samuel, coachman of Dr. W
to Mary, the maid of Mrs.
Colonel . . . The
polite salaams of Jacob to Rachel, the dressing
woman, and of Isaac, the footman, to Rebecca, the nursery maid, would
charm you. 13
That this behavior did not merely imitate that of the whites, but had
a solid foundation in the mores of the slaves themselves is to be seen
from the following, wherein Douglass tells how politeness was ex-
acted in the cabins :
not because they really sustained that relationship to any, but according
to plantation etiquette, as a mark of respect, due from the younger to
the older slaves. Strange, and even ridiculous as it may seem, among a
people so uncultivated, and with so many stern trials to look in the face,
there is not to be found, among any people, a more rigid enforcement
of the law of respect to elders, than they maintain. I set this down as
partly constitutional with my race, and partly conventional. There is no
better material in the world for making a gentleman, than is furnished
in the African. He shows to others, and exacts for himself, all the
AFRICANISMS IN SECULAR LIFE 151
practice of calling all old people 'Uncle* and Aunty whether they
are relatives or not/' 16 and in the following passage, which affords
testimony of how viable has been the custom noted for a preceding
generation by Douglass, he says :
... itconsidered bad luck to ... "sass" the old folks. This latter
is
idea may haveat one time had a real meaning, since the old folks were
"almost ghosts," and hence worthy of good treatment lest their spirits
17
avenge the disrespect and actually cause bad luck to the offender.
The validity of this explanation is best indicated by referring the
assertion that "old folks" are "almost ghosts" to the tenets of the
ancestral cult which, as one of the most tenacious Africanisms, has
left many traces in New World Negro customs. For, as has been
shown, the belief in the power of the ancestors to help or harm their
descendants is a fundamental sanction of African relationship group-
ings, and
this has influenced the retention of Africanisms in many
when would be ready. She said, "Oh, tomorrow evening." After sup-
it
per the next day I went back. She reproached me on the ground that it
had been done for five or six hours and I could have had it earlier "I :
expected you to come around about two o'clock this evening." Morning
is from when you get up until around two, and evening is from then on.
At first I thought only Negroes used the word in this way, but later
found that white people do too. 19
expected of him, he will ask what is customary not what is the law.
He seems subconsciously to feel that custom is more powerful than law.
And yet there are instances where no one can tell him just what is the
custom or what will be accepted. In this case he falls back on old habits.
1 54 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
If these habits are not accepted, the Negro merely "turns on his per-
We *
sif de meal, dey gib us de huss ;
... the Negro does love to Ipugh at the mishaps of his white master,
as evidenced by such stories as that of the new field hand who did not
understand the meaning of the dinner bell. His master found him in the
working after the bell had rung, and angrily commanded him
field still
to "drop whatever he had in his hands" and run for the table whenever
he heard it ring. Next day at noon he was carrying his master, taken
sick in the fields, across a foot-log over the creek when the bell rang.
He "dropped" the white man in the water and nothing was done to him
for he had only done what the master had commanded. 22
This complex of indirection, of compensation by ridicule, of eva-
sion, and of feigned stupidity has obviously been important in per-
mitting the Negro to get on in the different situations of everyday
life he has constantly encountered. How this operated during the
out as evil from among their brethren, and being subjected to scorn, and
23
perhaps personal violence or pecuniary injury.
prestige that goes with winning ; that there is no reason why anyone
should deny knowing it. Yet in the islands, unless one comes on men
actually playing knowledge even of its existence is almost in-
it,
must be clear that slavery did nothing to diminish the force of its
sanctions. Nor have the disabilities under which the Negro has lived
since slavery tended to decrease its appeal as an effective measure
of protection. Nonetheless, certain characteristic reactions to life in
Africa itself on the part of upper class as well as ordinary folk,
which even take certain institutionalized forms in the political sys-
tem of at least one well-integrated African culture make it essential
that this tradition of indirection be regarded as a carry-over of
aboriginal culture.
One instance where this view was clearly expressed was in the
course of a discussion of nonesoteric aspects of Bush Negro burial
rites such matters as the disposal of the house of the dead, kinds
of goods placed in coffin, and the like. The conversation dealt with
no new points, but was merely incident to checking certain overt
details of death rituals which had been jointly observed and partici-
had no guns and hacKto fight with hoe handles, but they were wiser
than to ask directly that a man tell them something to his dis-
advantage!"
As has been stated, many other instances of the principle of in-
direction as this operates among Negroes might be given from the
158 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
West Indies and West Africa no less than from the United States,
such as the oblique references in the "songs of allusion" that play
an appreciable role in regulating social life. Certainly this principle
is~ every where given clear expression as a guide to overt behavior.
dealings, the principle that one keep one's counsel and, as a mini-
mum, offer only such information as may be requested, has been
found to be not unprofitable. To ask a question such as Puckett
poses, "May not the organized hypocrisy of the Southern Negro
also be an adaptation forced upon the Negro by conditions of life?"
shows how misinterpretation can easily arise where the force of
traditional sanctions has gone unrecognized. For diplomacy, tact,
and mature reserve are not necessarily hypocrisy and while the situa-
;
tion of the Negro in all the New World, past and present, has been
such as to force discretion upon him as a survival technique, it is
also true that hecame on to the scene equipped with the technique
rather than with other procedures that had to be unlearned before
this one could be worked out.
The principle of indirection, then, must be looked on as imme-
diately descended from the African scene. The implications of this
fact in giving form to Negro behavior, like other intangibles such
as canons of etiquette and concepts of time also considered in this
section, cannot be overlooked if a true picture of Negro life is to be
had, either for scientific analysis or to help understand the present-
day interracial situation.
ing for situations that might otherwise fall into the hands of the law.
Aimes has given the matter the most careful study of any student to
date, but has found few clues except in the early history of the
27
period of slavery. The Negroes of New England, particularly of
Connecticut, appear to have elected a headman or "governor." A
record exists of a gravestone in the burial ground of Norwich, Con-
necticut, inscribed "In memory of Boston Trowtrow, Governor of
28
the African tribe in this Town, who died 1772, aged 66." Steiner,
who takes it for granted that the election of such an official by the
good use if properly directed. The basis of his power undoubtedly lay
in some combination of the mores of the negroes themselves. Traces of
this individual power seem to be present in the Gabriel revolt in Vir-
ginia in 1800, and in the Nat Turner revolt at a later date. It is not to
be supposed that the negroes would have submitted to a form of con-
30
juration derived from Indians.
known, but has been stressed in favor of the large number of less
162 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
diverted from the channels it followed among the donor group and
emphasized for the Negro lodge its distinctive traits.
Whatever the derivation of such organizations, their importance
has long been recognized. Citations such as the following are typical
of earlier studies :
found, would run into the hundreds. Sometimes they continue for a
year, sometimes only for one or two meetings. ... study of the A
names of the societies will reveal much of their nature.
. . .
They . . .
number of people. There are non-paying members who receive only the
advantages coming from the fraternal society there are those who take
;
insurance for sick benefits only, while others wish burial expenses also.
Still others take life insurance, while some combine all benefits, thus
35
paying the larger assessments and dues.
the societies, and some belong to more than one. Twenty to thirty cents
a week is a rough and conservative estimate of the average family con-
37
tribution for insurance.
There were 224 of the 612 families who now have, or have had, insur-
ance, and 170 of these paid premiums of 25 cents a week or less.
38
Twenty-one companies and lodges were represented in these numbers.
The many functions of the various fraternal or insurance socie-
1 64 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
pastime from the monotony of work, a field for ambition and intrigue,
a chance for parade, and insurance against misfortune. Next to the
church they are the most popular organizations among Negroes. 40
heritage which was filled with the cooperative spirit. This spirit of co-
operation was not crushed during the days before the Civil War but
42
emerged in the form of a Negro economy.
Some instances of insurance societies in aboriginal African groups,
and in the New World outside the United States, may be cited to
indicate why the institutionalization of this feature of
Negro life in
the United States must be referred to the stimuli of aboriginal cus-
tom. The cooperative work groups that are more or less ad hoc, such
as the Dahomean dokpwe and the Haitian combitc, have been men-
tioned but these only begin the tale of cooperation. Almost all perma-
;
nent groupings other than kinship units possess cooperative and even
insurance features. Mutual self-help characterizes Dahomean iron-
-werking guilds. Each member of a "forge" accumulates such scrap
iron as he can, and the entire membership joins in turning this iron
into hoes or other salable objects until the supply is exhausted, when
they turn to the materials of the next member. What has been made
from a man's iron is his to sell as he will, and from the proceeds he
supports himself and gets the means to buy more iron to be worked
when is again reached. It makes no difference if he is ill
his turn
when comes, since all will work on his iron regardless of his
this
jority. Outstanding are its higher illegitimacy rate and the particu-
lar role played by the mother. Certain other elements in Negro social
organization also make it distinctive, and these will be considered
later; but for the moment the more prominent characteristics must
be treated in terms of the cognate African sanctions which make
them normal, rather than abnormal, and go far in aiding us to com-
prehend what must otherwise, after the conventional manner, be
regarded as aberrant aspects of the family institution.
At the outset, it is necessary to dismiss the legal implications of
the term "illegitimate'* and to recognize the sociological reality un-
derlying an operational definition of the family as a socially sanc-
tioned mating. In this case, illegitimacy is restricted to those births
which are held outside the limits of accepted practice. The situation
in the West Indies, projected against the African background of
marriage rites and family structure, will here as elsewhere make for
vision are much more the province of the mother than of the father.
In most parts of the African areas which furnished New World
slaves, the conventions pf. inheritance are such that a man may, and
often does make an arbitrary selection of his heir from among his
sons. Because of* there is a constant jockeying for position
this,
among his wives, whoare concerned each with placing her children
in the most favorable light before the common husband. The psycho-
the approval of the families of the principals, they are, indeed, di-
rectly in line with African custom.
The "competent, self-sufficient women" who wish to have no hus-
bands are of especial interest. The social and economic position of
women in West Africa is such that on occasion a woman may refuse
to relinquish the customary control of her children in favor of her
husband, and this gives rise to special types of matings that are
recognized in Dahomey and among the Yoruba, and may represent
a pattern having a far wider distribution. The phenomenon of a
woman "marry ing" a woman, 50 which has been reported from vari-
ous parts of the African continent and is a part of this same com-,
plex, testifies to the importance of a family type which might well
have had the vitality necessary to make of it a basis for the kind of
behavior outlined in the case of the "self-sufficient" woman who, in
the United States, desires children but declines to share them with
a husband. The same traditional basis exists for "children by the
way," those offspring of women, once married, by men other than
their husbands.
In the community studied by Powdermaker, types of mating and
attitudestoward them have likewise been differentiated :
For this group, there are three man and woman may
ways in which a
live together : licensed marriage, solemnized
by a ceremony, usually in a
church common-law marriage and temporary association, not regarded
; ;
Even the few members of the upper middle class who are regularly
married do not as a rule consider it necessary to go through court pro-
cedure in order to be divorced from a former mate and free to marry
another. It is not regarded as immoral to remarry without securing a
divorce, since in this class the marriage license is not a matter of morals,
and marriage itself is highly informal. Divorce proceedings are expen-
sive, and involve dealing with a white court, which no Negro chooses if
he can avoid them. Thus a legal divorce becomes something more than
a luxury; it savors of pretension and extravagance. 52
The status of husband and wife in the black worker's family assumes
roughly three patterns. Naturally, among the relatively large percentage
of families with women heads, the woman occupies a dominant position.
But, because of the traditional role of the black wife as a contributor to
the support of the family, she continues to occupy a position of authority
and is not completely subordinate to masculine authority even in those
families where the man is present. The entrance of the black
. . .
children are completely subject to the will of the male head. However,
especially in southern cities, the black worker's authority in his family
55
may be challenged by his mother-in-law.
Johnson has differentiated family types in the rural region studied
by him into another set of categories. Noting the fact that in terms
of the commonly accepted pattern wherein the father is head of the
family, "the families of this area are, . . .
considerably atypical,"
mother is of much greater
since, "in the first place, the role of the
importance than in the more familiar American group," he goes
on to distinguish three kinds of families. First come those "which
are fairly stable" and are "sensitive to certain patterns of respecta-
1
bility then there are those termed "artificial quasi- families" that
;
mobile, the children of these in the active ages move about freely and
often find their own immediate offspring, while young, a burden, as they
move between plantations. Marriages and remarriages bring increasing
numbers of children who may be a burden to the new husband or a hin-
drance to the mother if she must become a wage-earner. The simplest
expedient is to leave them with an older parent to rear. This is usually
intended as a temporary measure, but it most often ends in the estab-
lishment of a permanent household as direct parental support dwindles
down. The responsibility is accepted as a matter of course by the older
woman and she thereafter employs her wits to keep the artificial family
57
going.
white majority. Yet it must not be forgotten that the economic and
social role of the man in Negro society is of the utmost significance
in rounding out the picture of Negro social life. Though important
from the point of view of the search for Africanisms, interest in
the position of women in the family must not obscure perspective
so as to preclude the incidence and role of those families wherein
thecommon American pattern is followed. Despite the place of
women in the West African family, the unit holds a prominent
place for the husband and father who, as head of the polygynous
group, is the final authority over its members, sharing fully in all
176 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
among these is the fact that an older woman frequently gives the
group its unity and coherence. Frazier indicates the following sanc-
tions in explaining the place of such elderly females in Negro
families :
The Negro grandmother's importance is due to the fact not only that
she has been the "oldest head'* in a maternal family organization but
also to her position as "granny" or midwife among a simple peasant folk.
As the repository of folk wisdom concerning the inscrutable ways of
nature, the grandmother has been depended upon by mothers to ease the
pains of childbirth and ward off the dangers of ill luck. Children ac-
knowledge their indebtedness to her for assuring them, during the crisis
of birth, a safe entrance into the world. Even grown men and women
refer to her as a second mother and sometimes show the same deference
and respect for her that they accord their own mothers. 59
that itnot only among the "simple peasant folk'* of the country-
is
side that she wields her power but in the city as well is to be seen
from the following :
The Negro grandmother has not ceased to watch over the destiny of
theNegro families as they have moved in ever increasing numbers to
the cities during the present century. For example, she was present in
61 of the families of 342 junior high school students in Nashville. In
25 of these a grandfather was also present. But in 24 of the remaining
36 families, we find her in 8 families with only the mother of the children,
in 7 with only the father, and in 9 she was the only adult member. 60
How large these family groups headed by old women may be, and
from how many sources members may be drawn, is to be seen
their
in the description of one such family given by Powdermaker :
This has some explanation in the slave origins of these families. Chil-
dren usually remained with the mother the father was incidental and
;
could very easily be sold away. The role of mother could be extended to
04
that of "mammy'* for the children of white families.
We have spoken of the mother as the mistress of the cabin and as the
head of the family. Not only did she have a more fundamental
. . .
interest in her children than the father but, as a worker and a free agent,
except where the master's will was concerned, she developed a spirit of
05
independence and a keen sense of her personal rights.
A Wench, complete cook, washer and ironer, and her four children
a Boy 12, another 9, a Girl 5 that sews; and a Girl about 4 years old.
Another family a Wench, complete washer and ironer, and her Daugh-
68
ter, 14 years old, accustomed to the house.
These citations are not made to suggest that due attention has not
been paid to the place of the father in the slave family, though it is
undoubtedly true that he has received less study than has the mother
in research into the derivation of present-day family types among
the Negroes. The fact of the matter, however, is that the roles of
both parents were individually determined, varying not only from
region to region and plantation to plantation, but also being affected
by the reactions of individual personalities on one another. Not
only was the father a significant factor during slaving, but a reading
of the documents will reveal how the selling of children even very
young children away from their mothers is stressed again and
again as one of the most anguishing aspects of the slave trade.
Whether in the case of newly arrived Negroes sold from the slave
ships or of slaves born in this country and sold from the plantations,
there was not the slightest guarantee than a mother would not be
separated from her children. The impression obtained from the con-
temporary accounts, indeed, were perhaps more
is that the chances
than even that separation would occur. This means, therefore, that,
though the mechanism ordinarily envisaged in establishing this
"maternal" family was operative to some degree, the role of slav-
ery cannot be considered as having been quite as important as has
been assumed.
The total economic situation of the Negro was another active
force in establishing and maintaining the "maternal" family type.
No considerable amount of data are available as to the inner eco-
nomic organization of Negro families, but the forms of Negro
AFRICANISMS IN SECULAR LIFE 179
202 colored people own property. The assessed value for the majority
of these holdings ranges from $300 to $600. Of the 202 owners, 100 are
men, owning property valued at $61,250, and 93 are women, with hold-
ings valued at $57,460. Nine men and women own jointly property
totaling 83280 in value. Among the Whites also, about half the owners
are women. When White women are owners, it usually means that a
man has put his property in his wife's name so that it cannot be touched
if he gets into difficulty. Among the Negroes, many women bought the
71
property themselves, with their own earnings.
gion of the Guianas, for example, the mother and grandmother are
essentially the mainstays of the primary relationship group. man A
obtains his soul from his father, but his affections and his place
in society are derived from his mother a person's home is his
;
original milieu.
It will be recalled that at the outset of this section it was stated
that other survivals than those to which attention has been given
thus far are betokened by certain facts mentioned more or less in
passing in the literature. One of these concerns the size of the re-
lationship group. The African immediate family, consisting of a
father, his wives, and their children, is but a part of a larger unit.
This immediate family is generally recognized by Africanists as
4
of the present community are practically the same as those of the old
plantation, a part of which is rented. But most of the land is
. . .
At present there are in the settlement ten children and thirty grand-
children of our informant. His brother, who also lives in the settlement,
has six children and one grandchild. Working under the control and
direction of the head of the settlement, the children and grandchildren
raise cotton, corn, peanuts, peas and tobacco. In this isolated community
with its own school this familv has lived for over a century. . . . These
1 84 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
closely knit families have been kept under the rigorous discipline of the
older members and still have scarcely any intercourse with the black
75
people in the county.
78
picked up by Negro families, to take root and grow.
are to be probed for their fullest significance, and proper and effec-
tive correctives for its stresses are to be achieved.
In most parts of the area from which the slaves came a woman
without childrenis socially handicapped. And while the system of
"papa. It has happened that men have adopted into their legitimate
families extra-legal children by other women, and with no apparent dis-
tinction that would make them unfavorably conspicuous among the other
children. Again, children orphaned by any circumstances are spontane-
80
ously taken into childless families.
It has been remarked that the adopted and illegitimate children in-
cluded in so many Negro households are considered full members of
the family. Adoption is practically never made legal, and is referred to
i88 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
as "giving" the children away. One of the several reasons for so fre-
quently giving children away is the repeated breaking up of families
and the inability or unwillingness of the remaining mate to care for
them. Because of the strong desire most people have for children, there
is always someone ready to take them in. .
Except in the small
. .
upper class, a child practically always calls the woman who adopts him
"mother/' This is done even when the real mother is one of the house-
hold, which would occur chiefly in cases of adoption by a grandmother.
. .Whatever the motivation of the adoption, there is no attempt to
.
conceal their origin from adopted children. Even if the attempt took
place in early infancy, they usually know they have been given away,
and adults have no hesitation in talking about it before them. No stigma
attached to giving a child, it is an accepted procedure. Nor is it ordi-
narily considered a misfortune to be a "gift child/' As a rule no differ-
ence is made between them and the children of the house, although a
case has been quoted in which a woman felt that she had been made to
work harder than her aunt's own children. The children seldom evince
s-
any sense of being outsiders.
That the pattern of adoption in these Negro communities differs
from the conventions concerning adoption operating in white groups
in this country is apparent without further analysis. The problem
thus once again becomes that of accounting for the distinctive qual-
ity of Negro custom. The data in hand are unfortunately neither
sufficient nor effectively enough placed in their cultural matrix to
permit conclusions to be drawn without further field research into
the ethnology of at least a few Negro communities in the United
States. Yet on the basis of comparative background materials, even
such general statements as have been quoted make it clear that the
ashes until some time after the child has been born are the coun-
terparts of procedures recorded in various portions of West Africa.
The use of cobwebs as a means of stopping hemorrhage is found
in Africa, where dressings of this material are commonly used both
there and in the New World The care
tropics to stop bleeding.
used in disposing of the placenta and the treatment of the navel cord
84
are also largely African.
Certain Negro attitudes reported from the United States toward
abnormal births are highly specific in their African reference. Twins,
the child after twins, children born with teeth or with a caul or
other peculiarities are, among African folk, regarded as special types
of personalities whose spiritual potency calls for special treatment. 85
Equally widespread is the African belief that special measures must
be taken against malevolent spirits believed to cause a woman to
have a series of miscarriages or stillbirths, or consistently over a
period of time to bear infants who die one after the other. Among
86
the Geechee Negroes of Georgia, it is believed that, "if you cannot
raise your children, bury on its face the last one to die and those
coming after will live." A technique of tricking the malevolent
spirits, described as occurring among these Georgia Negroes, is
equally African: "If you wish to raise your newborn child, sell it
A woman, the mother of 16 children, lost the first 10. The tenth one
was buried on its face, and the other six, as they were born, were raised
without difficulty. This woman's daughter lost her first two children, but
the third was sold, and it lived. 87
Puckett, who has also included this case in his discussion of Negro
folk beliefs, has recognized its African character from a passage he
88
quotes from Talbot in support of his contention. Customs of this
nature are, however, spread much more widely than just in the
Niger Delta area, being found far to the east and west of that
region.
The African concept that anomalous births indicate the future
of a child is also a living belief in this country. Parsons
powers
states :
"
One born "foot fo'mos' or a twin cannot be kept in bonds. "You
kyan* put um clown in de pail, come right out." If you tie him, he will
"cross hisfeet, sleep, rise right up an' go 'way; take out his han' an*
sperit loose him dat born foot fo'mos'." I heard of one remarkable child
born foot foremost and "in double caul." 89
A baby is named on the ninth day. At this time, or when she first gets
up, a mother will carry the baby around the house, "walk right 'roun* de
house." The mother or some friend will give the name, probably a
92
family name "keep de name right in de fahmbly."
in the same
tradition as that just cited, though it emphasizes differ-
ent elements in the aboriginal complex :
An old Mississippi slave says that the child will die if you name him
before he is a month old seeming to indicate the fact that the spirit
should have a chance to familiarize itself with this locality before it is
pegged down. This conjecture is strengthened by the fact that when the
child is a month old he is taken all around the house and back in the
front door, then given a thimbleful of water. The meaning of this
practice has been forgotten although one informant claims that the thim-
bleful of water is to keep the baby from slobbering. 93
AFRICANISMS IN SECULAR LIFE 191
This rite of taking the infant about the house closely resembles the
Haitian custom of circling the habitation on any important ritual
occasion; taking a child to those places which will be of importance
to him "introducing" him to them, in a sense in a manner to be
encountered in many parts of West Africa.
How sturdily African traditions concerning names and naming
have resisted European encroachment can be made clearer if the
preceding passages, and the data to be adduced in paragraphs to
follow, are compared with materials describing analogous rituals
and beliefs found in the Gold Coast or Dahomey. The elaborate cere-
monies that mark the birth of a child and the events of his life, the
numerous categories of names that are given the infant, especially
in Dahomey, to reflect specific circumstances held to mark his con-
. . .
Cobb, in mentioning four native Africans, named Capity, Saminy,
Quominy, and Quor, who were slaves in Georgia, states that they had
facial tattooing and "were treated with marked respect by all the other
Negroes for miles and miles around.'* This suggests that the cultural
value of American names may not have been the same with the slave as
with the modern immigrant. African captions may even have conferred
a certain amount of distinction among the slaves, and thus have con-
tinued where the master allowed it. In fact, freedom from control of
white owners, in addition to a slowly forming family tradition, may have
192 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
been one reason why the free Negroes of 1830 seem to have possessed a
98
larger assortment of African names than did the slaves of that period.
Even though the Gullahs may not know the meaning of many African
words they use for proper names, in their use of English words they
follow a custom common in West Africa of giving their children names
which suggest the time of birth, or the conditions surrounding it, or
the temperament or appearance of the child. All twelve months of the
year and the seven days of the week are used freely. In some cases the
name indicates the time of day at which the birth occurs. In addition to
the names of the months and days, the following are typical: Earthy
(born during an earthquake), Blossom (born when flowers were in
bloom), Wind, Hail, Storm, Freeze, Morning, Cotton (born during
cotton-picking time), Peanut, Demri (born during potato-digging time),
Hardtime, Baclboy, Easter, Harvest, etc. Names suggestive of the West
African totems or clan names are Rat (female), Boy Rat (male), Toad,
etc.
AFRICANISMS IN SECULAR LIFE 193
"Jimmy of the Battery," or "Jimmy Black." I asked why his title was
Black. "Oh, him look so. Him one very black man," they said. 100
one should never sweep the room while the child is asleep. The idea is
that you will sweep him away, and this seems to be possibly a half-
remembered notion of the African "dream-soul" which leaves the body
102
during sleep.
If you have to "go a distance wid de chilV you notify de speret, call,
"Come, baby!" Unless you called back in this way, wherever "you stop
dat night, you wouldn' get any res' at all, 'cause de speret lef behin'.
Call him at eve'y cross-road you come to." 103
relationship to folk custom in child rearing and child care can only
be regarded as a commentary on procedures in initiating and carry-
ing through such enterprises. Quite without reference to the African
background, the fact that Mrs. Cameron, working to a considerable
extent in urban centers, was able to document the "high positions"
which the practitioners of folk medicine and magic "possess in their
respective communities," north and south, is eloquent of the short-
ness of the perspective under which good works are too frequently
undertaken :
Their hold must be very strong to allow them to maintain their ground
in the face of such powerful interferences as the State Boards of Health,
free dispensaries and free education. But the mould for the reception of
these beliefs is set from babyhood in many families and the traditions
surrounding these practitioners seem to still retain enormous force. 105
of origin, the difficulty in this case has been that the precise Afri-
can correspondence had never been recorded, and was thus not avail-
able to the comparative folklorist.
The importance of whipping among American Negroes as a tech-
nique of training the young has been frequently remarked. An ex-
ample of this is the following :
woman in the place was my mother. If I did wrong and one of them
saw me she'd whip me, and then she'd tell my mother and I'd get an-
other whipping. Today parents don't whip their children enough and
108
the children are getting worse."
wife "kambosa, she who makes trouble for me," the explanation
of the practice being that every elderly woman is on the lookout for
misbehavior. The old women are thought of as interfering unduly
in the life of the younger women, making their escapades more
difficult and assuring punishment on discovery.
begins with the death of a person, who must have a funeral in keep-
ing with his position in the community if he
to take his rightful
is
out of the belief that the resentment of a neglected dead person will
rebound on the heads of surviving members of his family when
neglect makes of him a spirit of the kind more to be feared than any
other a discontented, restless, vengeful ghost.
The ancestral cult resolves itself into a few essentials the impor-
tance of the funeral, the need to assure the benevolence of the dead,
and, in order to implement these points, concern with descent and
kinship. As illustrative of how these essentials have persisted, even
where acculturation to white patterns has been most far-reaching,
we may turn to the description of a family reunion of a group who,
as the descendants of a free mulatto couple, are in their customary
behavior as far removed as possible from the behavior of such
Africans as may be included in their ancestry :
This family has had family reunions for fifty years or more. When
the family reunion took place in 1930 there were grandchildren, great-
grandchildren, and four great-great-grandchildren in the ancestral home-
stead to pay respect to the memory of the founder of the family, who
was born in 1814 and died in 1892, and his wife, who died in 1895 at
the age of seventy-one. His only living son, eighty-four years old, who
was the secretary-treasurer of the family organization, was unable to
attend because of illness.The founder of the family had inherited the
homestead from his father, who was listed among the free Negroes in
1830. A minister, who had founded a school in the community in 1885
and knew him intimately, described him as "an old Puritan in his morals
and manners and the only advocate of temperance in the county" when
he came there to work.
The meeting was opened with a hymn, chosen because of its theme,
"leaning on the Everlasting Arm." The widow of the son of the founder
of the family spoke of the necessity of the children's "walking in the
straight path" that the founder "had cut out." Her daughter, a recent
AFRICANISMS IN SECULAR LIFE 199
Master of Arts from Columbia University and the vice-principal of a
colored high school in a large eastern city, had returned to the family
reunion. Another granddaughter read, as was customary, a paper em-
bodying the history of the achievements of the family and a eulogy of
their ancestors. The program included a prayer service after which din-
ner was served. The ceremony was ended by a visit to the family burying-
ground where there is a tombstone bearing the names of the founder
and his wife and the date of their birth and death. 110
tions have not persisted. Family reunions are common enough in this
country, but it is somewhat doubtful whether at many white family
reunions the day is ended with a visit to the tombstone of the
founders; whether eulogies of the "ancestors" this family was
founded in 1814, it will be remembered are included in the festivi-
ties; or whether such a strong religious tone is given the proceed-
ings. One must look for these elsewhere than in custom governing
affairs of this sort common to whites and Negroes. If the more de-
tailed accounts of ancestral rites are consulted, such as have been
recorded, for example, by Rattray for the Ashanti and for Dahomey
in the work already cited, indication will be found of the proveni-
ence of the intangible validations which have made for self -conscious-
ness on the part of this particular "extended family/' and have
shaped its family rituals.
The range of variation implied in resemblances between survivals
in the practices of a group sophisticated in terms of Euro-American
behavior, and the full-blown rituals of Africa itself or, for another
111
region of the New World, Dutch Guiana is thus seen to be great.
few greater events than the burial, and none which brings the commu-
nity together in more characteristic attitude. The funeral is a social
event, for which the lodge appropriates the necessary expenses. Here
the religious trend of the Negro is magnified and with praise of the
dead and hopes for the future he mingles religious fervor with morbid
113
curiosity and love of display.
Burial insurance is usually the first to be taken out and the last to be
relinquished when times grow hard. It is considered more important by
the very poor than sickness or accident insurance, although the latter is
becoming more popular. No Negro in Cottonville can live content unless
he is assured of a fine funeral when he dies. Fifteen cents a week and
five cents extra for each member of the family will guarantee a hundred-
dollar funeral, in which the company agent plays an active 114
part.
This, however, meant keeping alive the African tradition that the
principal ritual take place some time after the actual interment,
separating this, so to speak, from the funeral as such. The practice
was encouraged by economic and social conditions under slavery;
but it must be remembered that here, as in other forms of behavior
previously considered, this situation merely tended to rework a
tradition which, in such a manifestation as the Dahomean partial
117
and definitive burials,is found widely spread throughout West
Africa and is
today encountered in the New World where imposed
sage shows how in outline the entire African funeral complex, in-
cluding the delayed interment, was continued among the slaves :
There was one thing which the Negro greatly insisted upon, and
which not even the most hard-hearted masters were ever quite willing to
deny them. They could never bear that their dead could be put away
without a funeral. Not that they expected, at the time of burial, to have
the funeral service. Indeed, they did not desire it, and it was never
according to their notions. A funeral to them was a pageant. It was a
thing to be arranged for a long time ahead. It was to be marked by the
gathering of kindred and friends from far and near. It was not satis-
2O2 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
factory unless there was a vast and excitable crowd. It usually meant an
all-day meeting, and often a meeting in a grove, and it drew white and
black alike, sometimes almost in equal numbers. Another demand in this
case for the slaves knew how to make their demands was that the
Negro preacher "should preach thefuneral'* as they called it. In things
like the wishes of the slaves usually prevailed. "The funeral"
this,
loomed up weeks in advance, and although marked by sable garments,
mournful manners and sorrowful outcries it had about it hints of an
elaborate social function with festive accompaniments. 118
Oneof the big days among our people was, when a funeral was held.
A person from New Jersey who was not acquainted with our customs,
heard it announced that "next Sunday two weeks the funeral of Janet
:
That the custom, noted likewise by Puckett for recent times, 120
has by no means died out is illustrated by the recent experience, in
two instances, of having Negroes leave jobs to return south in order
to attend delayed funerals, in one instance, "of my mother who died
last spring." As in earlier days, the explanation of the principals was
in terms of the need to make proper preparations, and the difficulty
of gathering the family on short notice. Yet one may well ask why
such delayed funerals are not found among other underprivileged
groups in the population immigrants, for example, whose need
for delay in terms of their inability to leave jobs on short notice is
quite as great as that of the Negroes. This is made the more evi-
dent when it is pointed out that the explanation for this custom
given by Negroes, while in line with the practical requirements of
their life, happens to be very similar to the explanation given by
Dahomeans for their aboriginal form of the institution. For when
asked why they permit time to elapse between the "partial" and the
"definitive" burial of their dead, they likewise point out their need
for time to effect necessary preparations if the rites are to be car-
ried out in proper style. Whatever the rationalization, the proveni-
AFRICANISMS IN SECULAR LIFE 203
ence of the tradition as found in the United States is clear; the
lightit throws on attitudes toward death and burial among Negroes
in this country is merely further testimony of the vitality of the
entire complex of attitudes and rituals toward death that have car-
121
ried over in however changed outer form.
More Africanisms are found in some of the details of Negro
funeral procedure. Here, as elsewhere, it is to be regretted that no
consecutive account of the rituals of death are to be had for analy-
122
sis, yet such data as have been published unambiguously include
many African correspondences. The importance of proper mourn-
ing, by which is meant public vocal expression of grief, finds many
123
counterparts in the ancestral continent. Crape is worn by mem-
bers of the family, and not only placed on the door of the house
where the dead lived, but is even reported as being tied on "every
living thing that comes in the house after the body has been taken
out even to dogs and chickens/' As an "attempt to pacify an
124
avenging spirit which was the cause of death," this likewise re-
flects African procedure and belief. The extension of separating
burial and funeral rites into the holding of multiple funerals for a
When an Odd-Fellow dies, "de body cover up, nobody mus* touch.
Six men come to bade an' dress de body." Similarly, on the death of
a Good Samaritan, "de body cover up, no one can touch de body 'til
de Sisters come. Sen' to de Wordy (Worthy) Chief. Fo' Sisters come
wash de body an' lay out. Nobody can look at de face widout de Sister
say so. Say, 'Can I look at de face?' 'Yes/ Each Sister has to watch
127
de body fo' one hour."
The chill of the audience bore down upon him, and he admitted,
almost bargainwise: "Brother Jesse had his faults, like you and me.
I talked with him at home and at the hospital." He excused himself
for not visiting at the hospital oftener: "They had to ask me not to
come to the hospital so much, 'cause there was so many sick folks just
like Brother Jesse." Everybody knew the deceased's forthrightness and
it could be mentioned again. 130
My master's brother's wife was so mean tel the Lord sent a peal of
lightenin' and put her She was too mean ter let you go ter the
to death.
well and git a drink of water, and God come 'long and "squashed" her
head open. 132
Puckett also points out that other beliefs as to the relationship be-
tween lightning and death are operative when he states that "If it
rains while a man is dying, or if the lightning strikes near his house,
133
the devil has come for his soul."
What may be regarded as a generalized pattern of formal leave-
taking of the dead by all his relatives and close friends, with varied
rites during the process, is deeply rooted in West African funeral
rituals. The custom of passing young children over the coffin has
not been reported for West Africa, but something closely related to
134
it has been witnessed among the Bush Negroes of Dutch Guiana,
"Dead moder will hant de baby, worry him in his sleep. Dat's de
reason, when moder die, dey will han' a little baby 'cross de box (ac-
cording to others, across the grave) same time dey fixin' to leave de
house, befo' dey put um in de wagon."
135
Puckett says :
We also learn from this same source that fruit trees in an orchard
are sometimes notified of the death of their owner, "lest all
137
decay"; and that at wakes the body, lying on a "coolin'-board,"
is addressed by the mourners as they take their farewell of the
their relatives are not respectful or if spouses marry too soon; and
various devices must be employed to ensure that their bodies will
remain quiet, such as fastening their feet together or weighting
them down. 141 The dead may on occasion return to the scenes they
knew when alive, and in such instances a feast may be provided for
142
them. Or, again, offerings may be placed in the coffin, or in the
form of coins on a plate near the coffin to be used by the family
of the dead, or on the grave. 143 And while all these customs, as found
in the United States, probably represent syncretisms of African and
gious bent that is but the manifestation here of the similar drive
that, everywhere in Negro societies, makes the supernatural a major
focus of interest.
The tenability of this position is apparent when it is considered
how, in an age marked by skepticism, the Negro has held fast to
belief. Religion is vital, meaningful, and understandable to the
207
208 THJ MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
They then accepted the revival and preached the gospel and became
5
disciplinary on matters of amusement and public entertainments.
. .there was a strong attraction of the slaves for the Baptist church
.
them. Finally the mode of baptism among the Baptists satisfied the
7
desire of the Negro for the spectacular.
recorded where his influence has been felt by whites, even during
15
the period of slavery. The fact that differences between denomina-
tions are unimportant in the minds of members of the various
churches in the town studied by Powdermaker would further indi-
cate that it is the expression of religious feeling that is essential,
16
not the label.
These are the "shouting" sects, which play a large part in Negro
religious life. Such sects, termed "cults" in the passage which fol-
lows, are in it compared to and differentiated from the evangelistic
churches :
"
(i) primary emphasis upon "preaching the 'Word' (2) salvation by ;
1. A
leadership that is magnetic to an almost hypnotic degree and
its control over the cult devotees.
virtually dictatorial in
2. Frenzied overt emotional expression, such as shouting, running,
jumping, screaming, and jerking as a regular feature of the
worship services.
3. Frequent repetition of hymns transformed into jazzy swingtime
and accompanied with hand-clapping, tapping of feet and sway-
ing of bodies.
4. Testimonies given in rapid succession and certifying to the re-
17
ception of "miracles," healings, messages, visions, etc.
Within the cults this author distinguishes groups whose "entire pro-
gram seemed designed to magnify the personality of the leader of
"
the cults" those marked by
; 'spirit-possession/ a type of highly
emotionalized religious and ecstatic experience commonly designated
by such terms as 'filled with the Holy Ghost/ 'lost in the spirit,'
"
'speaking in tongues/ and 'rolling* ; and those to be considered as
212 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
pattern :
The company has long been swaying back and forth in the rhythm
of the preacher's chant, and now and then there has come a shout of
assent to the oft repeated text. Each time the preacher's almost inco-
herent talk becomes articulate in a shout, "I have trod de wine-press/'
there are cries of "Yes!" "Praise de Lawd!" and "Glory!" from the
Amen corner, where sit the "praying brethren," and from the Halle-
lujah corner, where sit the "agonizing sisteren." In the earlier demon-
stration the men rather lead, but from the time when Aunt Melinda
cries out, "Nebbah mind de wite folks! My soul's happy! Hallelujah!"
and leaps into the air, the men are left behind. Women go off into
trances, rollunder benches, or go spinning down the aisle with eyes
closed and with arms outstretched. Each shout of the preacher is a
signal for someone else to start; and, strange to say, though there are
two posts in the aisle, and the women go spinning down like tops, I
never saw one strike a post. I have seen the pastor on a day when the
house would not contain the multitude cause the seats to be turned and
take his own position in the door with a third of the audience inside
and the rest without. ... I have seen the minister in grave danger of
being dragged out of the pulpit by some of the shouters who in their
ecstasy laid hold upon him. I have seen an old man stand in the aisle and
jump eighty-nine times after I began to count, and without moving a
muscle of his thin, parchment face, and without disturbing the meeting. 28
theology and ritual cannot be said until such a study has been made.
Similarly, differences between Negroes and whites who belong to
these more restrained churches in the minutiae of belief and ritual
practices are not known and need not be studied, indeed, until far
more materials are in hand concerning the churches that represent
greater deviations from majority practice.
At
this point it is essential to summarize in greater detail than
inour earlier discussion the forms of belief and ritual that exist in
West Africa, and to follow this summary with a brief outline of
the transmutation these forms have experienced in the New World.
214 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
who has dealt with these peoples, is its intimate relation^ to the
daily round. The forces of the universe, whether they work good
or evil, are ever at hand to be consulted in time of doubt, to be
informed when crucial steps are to be taken, and to be asked for
help when protection or aid is needed. Thus, while it is quite in-
correct to describe the religion of the African as essentially based
on fear, as has often been done, the very nearness of the spirits
means that their requirements must be cared for as continuously
and as conscientiously as the other practical needs of life. Cult prac-
tices, therefore, have their humblest expression in individual wor-
ship. Sacred localities do exist, and priests have their social and
religious functions to perform, but in the final analysis the rapport
between a person and the invisible powers of the world are his
own immediate concern, to be given over into the hands of an
outsider only in times of special need.
These less formal modes of worship are, however, no more than
a beginning, for everywhere organized groups exist which, because
of the special training given their members, are regarded as vowed
to the service of particular spirits or deities. Such groups ordi-
narily include leaders priests, that is and followers, whose com-
petence varies with the degree to which they are permitted ac-
quaintance with the esoteric knowledge needed to give adequate
service to the god who is the object of devotion. The group may
be a family affair, and the god may in reality be an ancestor so
important that his worship has been taken over by the community
at large. Ritual may be strictly followed or may be more or
less improvised; the priest may exercise the closest control over
his followers or his* position may depend on their pleasure member-
;
gins by clapping his hands, nodding" his head, and patting his feet
in time to the rhythm of the drums. In this his behavior resembles
that of the others present, but he soon is to be distinguished by
the vigor of his movements and the fixity and remoteness of his
gaze. His motions become more and more emphatic, until, still
in his place, his head is thrown from side to side and his arms
thresh about him. Finally he dashes into the center of the cleared
space, where he gives way to the call of his god in the most violent
movements conceivable running, rolling, falling, jumping, spin-
ning, climbing, and later "talking in tongues," and prophesying.
As time goes on and he feels the ministrations of the one in charge
of the ritual take effect, he subsides and joins the dancers, who
always move about the dancing circle in a counterclockwise direc-
tion.In this case, his release from the spell is gradual sometimes, ;
only with time attains the complete release that comes to the
seasoned cult member. Correctrocedures of all kinds, such as know-
ing the songs to sing ToForfe's go3 arid the dances to dance in his
honor, and how to cope with others possessed by the god, as well
as more
esoteric facts concerning the deity and his associated divin-
itiesare taught a candidate in the training he receives before he
can become an active member of local religious groups. It is during
he also learns the meaning of those strange
this initiation period that
enjoy themselves or, where the opportunity offered, to profit from the
presence of a spirit by having a request transmitted to it.
218 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
The next winti called was the deity of the cross-roads, Leba. As the
drums played and the singing began anew, several persons, who were
seated, began to tremble. Their trembling began with the agitation of
the lower limbs, after which the knees began to shake. This was fol-
AFRICANISMS IN RELIGIOUS LIFE 219
lowed by the quivering of the hands, the twitching of the shoulders, and
the head. The expression was that of a person in a trance. Their
facial
eyes were either shut or they stared blankly, and the muscles were set
and tense. As the drumming and singing continued, the heads of those
who were experiencing possession began to shake agitatedly and to roll
from side to side,and in this state they raised themselves from their
seats, and sank back again. As the twitching and trembling and rolling
of the head became more and more violent, a friend or relative seated
beside the ones who were becoming possessed straightened the head-
kerchiefs which were by now askew, if the persons were women, and
helped them back to their seats. From time to time an exclamation issued
from their lips, a shout, a groan, or words spoken
rapidly and unintel-
ligibly. They were speaking the secret language of the winti. As their
movements increased in violence, the arms were thrown about so that
ductions, furthermore, links West Africa, on the one hand, and spirit
possession in North American Negro churches, on the other, in
unmistakable fashion.
Because of the overwhelming adherence to Protestantism of
Negroes however, the significance of what is found
in this country,
in these Catholic countries is not as great for comparative purposes
nection, since in this island the gamut runs from cults as African in
their forms of worship and theology as anything to be encountered
in Guiana or Haiti or Brazil to a formal Protestantism among the
Negroes that is as "correct" in its observances as Negro Episcopal
or Presbyterian or other more restrained churches in the United
States. Citations to these data in published form cannot be made at
this time, inasmuch as the field material was only gathered in IQ39. 8S
Specifically, religious custom in Trinidad varies from the completely
African Shango cult through the Baptist "shouters" (who are, in a
sense, an "underground" movement, since they are proscribed by
government ordinance), to the European-like groups affiliated with
Moravian, Presbyterian, Seventh-Day Adventist, Church of Eng-
land, and Catholic denominations.
It is unnecessary to describe the Shango cult procedures in any
detail, since, except for certain relatively minor aspects, they dupli-
cate corresponding rites that have been sketched as found in Africa,
Guiana, Haiti, and Brazil. The importance of the local group is as
apparent in this cult as in these other areas, and the role of the priest
is that of the leader in Africa. Drums and rattles and song -bring on
counteract the inroads these "shouters" were making into their fol-
lowing. They strikingly resemble the early Christians in their com-
munal cooperativeness, in the measures they take to exact discipline
and morality within their own groups, and in the gentle nonresistance
with which they persist in carrying on despite the edicts against them
and what they regard as constant persecution resulting from enforce-
ment of the law which makes them subject to frequent raids and
fines or jail sentences.
When initially visited, meetings of this sect seem to differ but
little from services in churches of the more decorous denominations,
the outstanding thing about their ritual being the devotion of the
communicants to the "Sankeys," as they term songs from the Sankey
and Moody hymnal, which they know in enormous numbers, with
every verse to each song memorized. Yet even at first sight certain
aspects of their humble meeting places are apparent that, differing
from what is found in more conventional Christian churches, at once
strike the eye of the Af ricanist. Markings in white chalk on the floor,
at the doors, and around the center pole are reminiscent of
the so-called "verver" designs found in Haitian vodun rituals. The
presence of a large bell, the ritual importance of the central post, and
other elements in the building complex comprise further of these
deviations from customary practice in the direction of West African
ritual.
As one becomes better known to the membership, more variants
are permitted to come
to light. A
period of initiation for neophytes,
called "mourning" here as in the Itfegro churches of. the United
States, suggests the seclusion of novitiates in Afdca.and.the period
of probation undergone by candidates for membership in a Haitian
vodun cult group. The incidence and character of the visions "seen"
AFRICANISMS IN RELIGIOUS LIFE 223
that the difficulty has in many cases been a semantic one for, as this
author remarks :
The mere fact that a people profess to be Christians does not neces-
sarily mean that their Christianity is of the same type as our own. The
way in which a people interpret Christian doctrines depends largely
upon customs and their traditions of the past. There is an
their secular
between the Christianity of the North and South in
infinite difference
America, between that of city and country, between that of whites and
colored, due in the main to their different modes of life and social
backgrounds. Most of the time the Negro outwardly accepts the doc-
trines of Christianity and goes on living according to his own conflict-
ing secular mores, but sometimes he enlarges upon the activities of God
to explain certain phenomena not specifically dealt with in the Holy
35
Scriptures.
by and of itself.
cannot be denied that the situation under which the Negro was brought
from Africa to this country and the conditions to which he was exposed
after his arrival, laid the basis for his being particularly psychologically
susceptible to the reception and exaggeration of certain patterns of re-
40
ligious behavior he observed among the white majority.
less man, with his entire traditional baggage limited to the fragments
he has been able to pick up from his white masters and, because of
innate temperamental qualities, to "exaggerate" them into exuberant
and exotic counterparts.
Powdermaker is somewhat more realistic and hence more tentative
in her approach when she considers the problem of derivations. She
observes :
What are the differences between Negro and white revivals as ob-
served by this student ? They are indicated as follows :
by Powdermaker herself :
. . . one can only speculate about why the Negroes respond with such
marked readiness to the opportunity for this form of display. There
is much to be said for the theory that the repressions 'caused by the
interracial situation find relief in unrestrained religious behavior. Such
an explanation is partial, however. Other factors, unrevealed by this
43
study, are still to be sought.
own in contact with white religious custom, but also in all likelihood
to make its contribution to white religion as well.
Certain forms of white revivalism had undoubted independent
origin. Davenport, whose work of several decades ago is perhaps still
AFRICANISMS IN RELIGIOUS LIFE 229
the best discussion of this question, points out that as early as 1734
the "Great Awakening," begun in New England under Jonathan
Edwards, spread from Maine to Georgia during the decade between
1740 and 1750, and was the inspiration of the Scotch-Irish revival
in Ulster of a slightly later period. The presence of a sect of
"jumpers" in Wales in 1740, and the appearance in England of a
sect of French Prophets in the early eighteenth century, after they
"had been driven out of France and had already spread the well-
known phenomena of nervous instability through Germany and Hol-
land," likewise testifies to the presence of revivalism and hysteria in
44
regions removed from African influence. But these earlier re-
vivalist movements also differed in many respects from the camp-
country. The fact that this is a matter for future analysis does not
in any way lessen the importance of the problem that it has been ;
tion save for a few hours in the early morning. It was not until Satur-
day evening, however, that any special outbreak of overwrought nature
manifested itself. Then two women became greatly excited, and their
fervor was communicated by contagion through the whole multitude.
The camp became a battle-ground of sobs and cries, and ministers spent
48
nearly the whole night in passing from group to group of the "slain."
The slaves attended these [early white camp] meetings in large num-
bers. . . The time of meeting was the interval in the late summer
.
between the laying by and gathering of the main crops (exactly the
period most in use today for rural white and colored revival meetings)
and the general pattern of service, even to the mourner's bench at the
front of the auditorium, was remarkably like that followed by modern
52
rural Negroes and mountain whites.
ceremony after
ceremony witnessed among the Yoruba, the Ashanti,
and in Dahomey, one invariable element was a visit to the river or
some other body of "living" water, such as the ocean, for the pur-
pose of obtaining the liquid indispensable for the rites. Often it was
necessary to go some distance to reach the particular stream from
which water having the necessary sacred quality must be drawn in ;
strengthen any river cult foreign to the newly arrived Africans. This
Indian rite included total immersion at each recurring new moon. It
required fasting before immersion, something which in spirit is not
too far removed from the restraints laid on the novitiate of any cult
in Africa, or in the rites of certain "shouting" sects where new
members "go to mournin' " before baptism. Certainly its presence in
the Negro milieu reemphasizes, if this is now necessary, the com-
sion so large a place in its ritual is the most popular single denom-
ination among Negroes.
tween magic. and other types of folk belief of the two continents oc-
curred; it is necessary, however, first to recognize that the process
wa^tihe in which both parties participated, and then to seek out the
elements essentially African in the magic practices actually found
among Negroes in this country at the present time.
Puckett holds that most Negro beliefs of this order are African
236 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
ground during a meal is not swept up that day, since the spirits
(sometimes ancestors) must be permitted to come and eat what they
have thus indicated they desire. Cable also points out that in New
Orleans a red ribbon was worn about the neck of a devotee "in honor
of Monsieur Agoussou." 59 In the pantheons of the West African
tribes, various colors are favored by the several gods, of which red
is always one. The reason for wearing the red ribbon given by
Puckett, namely, the similarity of this color to blood, obtains no con-
firmation in the comparative data. The name of the "demon" honored
by this color comes directly from Dahomey and is found in the
voodoo cult of Haiti as well as in that of New Orleans.
In one of her novels, Julia Peterkin speaks of this belief among
the Gullah Negroes :
All Kildee's life he had heard that to stir the earth on Green Thurs-
day was a deadly sin. Fields plowed, or even hoed to-day would be
struck by lightning and killed so they couldn't bear life again. God
would send fire down from heaven to punish men who didn't respect
60
this day.
AFRICANISMS IN RELIGIOUS LIFE 237
incur the wrath of the Thunder gods who kill offenders with lightning.
The story is told of a man whose house may still be seen in Abomey
who, being ambitious, was cultivating his fields on this day, when a
bolt of lightning struck and killed him. 61
Some ... old ... people try to save every strand of hair and every
finger and toe nail, because they say that when they die they will have
to show them before they can get into heaven. These hair combings are
sometimes kept in a paper sack and the teeth and nails in a small box,
both of which are buried with the individual when he dies. 67
In West Africa, and among at least the Negroes of the Guiana bush,
hair and nail clippings are employed in place of the body itself when
circumstances make it impossible to bring back a corpse to his family
for burial. An
instance of this African practice was had when on
the death of the member of the Kru tribe resident in Chicago already
mentioned, cuttings of the hair of his head, and his finger- and toe-
nail parings, were returned to Liberid to be interred and thus ensure
that his soul would remain at peace.
A final example can be taken from an account of the wealth of
Negro beliefs concerning snakes :
joint snake (really a degenerate lizard which can voluntarily snap off
part or all of its and grow a new one) can come together after
tail
dren in fact, all snakes can charm birds, animals, and human beings
with their gaze. The green snake is the doctor snake and the darning-
needle is the snake-doctor, both of which cure injured snakes and even
bring the dead back to life. A horse hair deposited in a watering trough
will turn into a snake if left undisturbed for a period of six weeks (a
belief originating, no doubt, in the fact that a parasitic worm, spending
68
parts of its life cycle in a grasshopper, is often found in horse troughs) .
AFRICANISMS IN RELIGIOUS LIFE 239
the term as used by the Negro is somewhat more inclusive than the Eng-
lish term "omens," taking in not only omens but various small magical
ways:
The first ... is to be especially endowed with supernatural power.
This most often takes the form of seizures similar in type to cataleptic
ones. This, as is explained, comes "like a thunderbolt from a clear sky."
... By whatever means the message comes it instantly makes the re-
cipient qualified for the task,and he possesses all the techniques of the
craft. These healers so strongly believe in their ability to perform cures
that they not only become deeply insulted when one expresses disbelief
in their method of diagnosis and treatment, but may say that this dis-
believer can expect to be chastened by the supernatural power. . . .
this novice under and gives him guidance, and in this way he
his care
learns by clinical contact with actual cases. In some instances the novice
may possess a blood-tie with the trained practitioner, while in others
there may be nothing more than a friendship which exists between the
family of the former and that of the latter. The third manner of
. . .
mit, he serves. Each case gives added experience until a good reputation
is obtained. . . .
Many practitioners state that in occasional crises they
receive direct help from a voice which gives directions and tells of reme-
dies that bring marvelous results which gain for the practitioner dis-
71
tinction and fame.
The difference between the two types of healers goes deeper than
mere outward appearance, as can be seen when the following passage
is compared with the preceding one :
some instances it is not only voluntary, but mandatory that the son
follow the footsteps of his father, and a refusal to do so is punishable
by bad luck or sickness. It cannot be gainsaid that the craft is free to
all,for one may enter by choice or be selected by older magicians, pro-
vided, however, that the chosen one is a "seventh-month" child or if
he is the seventh son of a father in which family no- girl has been
born, or if he is born with a caul over his face. ... As contrasted with
the inheritance of power we find that one may be put into apprentice-
ship for training, though this occurs very rarely. Even then the novi-
tiate must have exhibited special ability to manipulate magic. The magi-
cian seems to be more dependent upon the spirits of the dead ancestry
than upon God, as is the case with the herb-doctors, and their emphasis
is principally upon ritual and ceremonial. In all probability all novices
of both general groups receive some technical training from older prac-
titioners, forotherwise the question arises as to how they could obtain
all the knowledge of their profession which they must have. rarely We
find cases where fees are paid for instruction unless services rendered
ment the well-recognized fact that magic in some form or other has
characterized Negro life since the earliest days of their presence in
this country is deduced
to be from the many instances afforded in
contemporary writings. Thus one may compare a case involving a
73 74
healer, cited by Catterall, with a passage from Douglass wherein
*
desired end a force which is closely interwoven with his daily life and
one which deserves his earnest attention. But this power, like African
religion, is not moral, but is capable of indifferently working harm as
well as benefit. Thus it behooves its troopers to look to their armor as well
as to their arms Fortunately this matter of armament is sim-
. . .
plified in that for the most part one and the same substance serves alike
for shield and sword. 76
If the person desires, the trick may now be turned against the person
who planted it. Ed Murphy did this by laying the trick he had discov-
ered in a piece of paper, sprinkling quicksilver over it, and setting the
paper on fire. The trick exploded and made a hole in the ground a foot
deep asit burned up his enemy soon died. "It is said that if any one
you and you discover the trick and put that into the fire, you burn
tricks
your enemy, or if you throw it into the running water you drown
him." 77
One
point which emerges from a consideration of the gbo ... is
that good and bad magic are merely reflections of two aspects of the
same principle. The character of the gbo is such that while one of
. . .
these charms helps its owner, giving its aid to protect him from the
evil intentions or deeds of enemies, it also possesses the power to do
harm to the one who would do such evil to its possessor. Thus when a
man leaves a house for a few days, he places a nguneme charm so com-
mon as hardly even to be thought of as a gbo to protect his belongings.
. . . The power of this ... is such as to harm those who violate it.
... one who did violate property guarded by such a
It is believed that
Thus it can be seen that the Dahomean is relating what is, to him, an
obvious fact when he says that good and bad magic are basically the
same. 78
Some years ago Miss Mary Owen divided magic charms into four
categories good tricks, bad tricks, allthat pertains to the body, and
commanded things consisting of "such things as sand, or wax from
a new beehive things neither lucky nor unlucky in themselves, but
244 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
aspect of Negro life has been treated more exhaustively than almost
any other. Aside from the innumerable "tricks" named and described
81 82
by Puckett, and the full-length works of Owen and Hurston, one
finds great wealth of materials in the appropriate Memoirs of the
American Folk-Lore Society and in the Journal of American Folk-
Lore. Especially in the earlier numbers of this Journal, one comes
on detailed signed reports of various cases involving magic and de-
83
scriptions of the charms used, while the editors of that period were
also alert to abstract accounts appearing in other scholarly journals
and newspapers bearing on the subject. 84
These numerous data demonstrate that the broad principles of
sympathetic magic that function in Africa and the West Indies have
lost none of their appeal to Negroes of the United States. Instance
after instance proves again that the concept of magic applies to re-
sults obtained from what in scientific parlance would be termed
AFRICANISMS IN RELIGIOUS LIFE 245
poison with black magic exists in the United States as it does in the
West Indies or West Africa. There are even suggestions of carry-
overs in specific details of African life, reinterpreted but nevertheless-
immediately recognizable as, for example, a remedy, cited in the first
of Miss Moore's papers listed above, which included drawing in the
sand a design similar to that used everywhere by the Yoruba as a
decorative and quasi-religious motif.
of New
Orleans and Louisiana folk life that could not be accounted
for by reference to French traditions must have come from some-
where else, and that that somewhere was Africa; but this is inci-
dental in such writings, which customarily attempted only to describe
the "quaint" customs that characterized their subjects.
One of the richest stores of data pertaining to Negro custom is
the writing of George Cable, whose articles on New Orleans life,
and particularly whose novel describing this life in preslavery days,
The GrandissimeSj hold special significance for research into the
ethnography of United States Negroes. Based on intimate knowledge
of the locality and its history, it must be accepted as a valid docu-
ment if only on the basis of comparative findings. It is thus a real
contribution to our knowledge of life in this area during the time of
slavery, and a book which investigations into present-day custom
should take into careful account.
The names of several deities which figure in the vodun cults of
Haiti and Dahomey are mentioned in Cable's novel. Papa Lebat 88
"who keeps the invisible keys of all the doors that admit suitors/' is
;the Papa Legba of Haiti and the Dahomean trickster of this same
89
jiame, who has already been referred to. Danny is the Dahomean
points to a certain validity for the claims of those who give serpent
worship a prominent place in the cult of New Orleans. Hurston,
telling the story of Marie Laveau, the vodun priestess, as recounted
to her by the "hoodoo doctor" Turner, gives an important place to
the rattlesnake that "came to her bedroom and spoke to her," pre-
sumably calling her to membership in the cult. This serpent remained
with her "the rattlesnake that had come to her a little one when she
He piled great upon his altar and took nothing from the food set
before him. night he sang and Marie Laveau called me from my
One
sleep to look at him and see. "Look well, Turner/' she told me. "No
one shall hear and see such as this for many centuries." She went to
her Great Altar and made a The snake finished his
great ceremony.
song and seemed to sleep. She drove me
back to my bed and went
again to her Altar. The next morning, the snake was not at his altar.
248 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
His hide was before the Great Altar stuffed with spices and things of
power. Never did I know what became of his flesh. It is said that the
snake went off to the woods alone after the death of Marie Laveau, but
they don't know. This is his skin that I wear about my shoulders when-
ever I reach for power. 98
During her initiation into this same group, Hurston is told she
must come "to the spirit across running water" she is given a new ;
Whenthe fourth dancer had finished and lay upon the floor retching
in every muscle, Kitty was taken. The call had come for her. I could
not get upon the floor quickly enough for the others and was hurled
before the altar. It got me there and I danced, I don't know how, but
at any rate, when we sat about the table later, all agreed that Mother
102
Kitty had done well to take me.
specific and less numerous than in these other countries. The fol-
In the first seance she tells of a white girl calling upon a Negro
voodoo-woman to obtain help inwinning the man she loves. At the
meeting, the girl is allowed to wear nothing black, and is forced to re-
move the hairpins from her hair, lest soir.e of them be accidentally
crossed, thus spoiling the charm. In the room were paintings of the
various Catholic saints, and an altar before which was a saucer contain-
ing white sand, quicksilver, and molasses, apexed with a blue ^candle
burning for Saint Joseph (Veriquete). All the way through, there is this
strange mixture of Catholicism and voodooism. The "Madam" kneels
at the girl's feet and intones the "Hail Mary" of the Church, there is
a song to Liba (voodoo term for St. Peter) and another to Blanc Dani
(St. Michael). The money collected at the seance is put in front of
the altar with the sign of the cross. 108
roads, is conceived as
St. Peter, guardian of the keys. It is likewise
significant that he is the first of the two voodoo spirits called after
the "Hail Mary," for this confirms our assumption of his identity
with the Legba of Haiti and West Africa, where this god is likewise
the first called. Why Blanc Dani, Cable's "Danny" and the counter-
practicing his trade well outside the limits of the Catholic, sometime
French, area of Louisiana. Powdermaker reports "four famous
voodoo doctors'* living and practicing within a radius of fifty miles
111
of the community she studied, while Puckctt, who gives in some
detail the distribution of the cult, states that in 1885 it was esti-
mated that perhaps a hundred old men and women followed it as a
profession in Atlanta, and that similar cults, reinforced by West
Indian migration, have taken great hold in recent times in the Negro
112
district of New York.
In view of the manner in which the type of worship and magical
control represented by voodoo drives deep into the tradition^ beliefs
of the Negro, it should not be surprising if future study shows that
much more of the cult has persisted than is customarily held. Cer-
tainly, inany analysis of African survivals in the United States,
thisLouisiana enclave, where special historical circumstances have
made for the perpetuation of this African cult and for the preserva-
tion of more numerous and more specific African practices than in
any other portion of the country excepting the Sea Islands, should
receive far greater and systematic attention than has been given it.
responsible for this has its compensation again in the fact that Satan
himself is to be dethroned. 114
Hurston, who discusses the Negro point of view with the intimacy
of inside knowledge, describes the character of the Devil as con-
ceived by Florida Negroes in these terms :
That this Devil is far from the fallen angel of European dogma,
the avenger who presides over the terrors of hell and holds the souls
of the damned to their penalties, is apparent. So different is this
tricksterlike creature from Satan as generally conceived, indeed, that
he is almost a different being. To account for the difference, there-
AFRICANISMS IN RELIGIOUS LIFE 253
bad, this celestial trickster who balks the gods with his cunning
could easily be interpreted in this fashion. It is thus understandable
how, in the New World, where Protestantism placed special em-
phasis upon the difference between good and evil, the reinterpreta-
tion of this deity as the Devil was especially logical.
Yet reinterpretation was more verbal than otherwise ;
in no sense
did involve a wholehearted acceptance either of the Devil's per-
it
alone has the power to set aside certain misadventures in the destiny of
a person, and the power, also, to add to them. 116
254 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
without striking it, so provoking was its grin and so insulting its be-
havior generally, and when once you had struck it, you were lost. I
was always on the lookout for it, but, it is needless to say, I never
encountered it, except in dream-land, where again and again was suf-
fered the unspeakable horror of being caught and held stuck fast in its
117
tarry embrace.
they present the wooden side and then kill the one who has tried to
harm them. Eventually :
After the owner of a pair of bakru dies, and there is no one to care
for them, they disappear to live on the road. A
favorite diversion of
theirs is to mingle with children who are on their way home from
school. They try to touch the children, to tease them, and to offer them
a drink. It is death for a child to drink from the little bottle each bakru
carries in his pocket. ... A woman whose own aunt had had two
such creatures, looked under the bed after her aunt died, caught a
glimpse of the bakru, and fled. They were very black, black hair, black
skin, black eyes, . . . like Bush-Negro children. 118
Others say that hoodoomen, who always have long hair and beards,
always carry a loaded cane with which they tell whether you are honest
or not. 120
A Georgia convert told of God being a little white man two feet high
256 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
with pretty hair, ending her testimony by mourning and singing, "Ain'
dat pretty hair? Ain' dat pretty hair?" 121
large in contrast to the two mmoatia, the larger creature being dis-
tinguished by its long hair on head, face, and in the pubic region.
The text implements the illustrations. Of the mmoatia, described
by Rattray somewhat unfortunately in the citation above as-
"fairies," he says:
whistling. The black fairies are more or less innocuous, but the white
and the red mmoatia are up to all kinds of mischief, such as stealing
housewives' palm-wine and the food left over from the previous day.
The light-coloured mmoatia are also versed in the making of all manner
of suman which they may at times be persuaded to barter to mortals by
125
means of the "silent trade." . . ,
long hair, has large blood-shot eyes, long legs, and feet pointing both
ways. It sits on high branches of an odum or onyina tree and dangles its
AFRICANISMS IN RELIGIOUS LIFE 257
search needs to be made for their survivals. When such data are in
hand, however, we will be able to fill in our present rough outlines
with precise knowledge of how, under acculturation, the merging of
traits from various African tribes representedby the slaves worked
out into generalized belief of the type embodied in these manifesta-
tions of the "little folk" concept.
Ghosts, witches, and vampires are as well known in Africa as in
Europe, so that in this case the problem is to indicate the African
aspects of the belief in these beings found among Negroes of the
United States. Parsons speaks of old women being regarded as
witches in the Sea Islands, and tells the preventive measures to be
taken when they are thought to be about :
. . . there is the familiar belief about hags women who shed their
skins and victimize sleepers "ol* haigs what ride people in de sleep."
And the precautions to be taken are likewise familiar. "Say if you want
to ketch dat haig, you scatter mustard-seed fo' de do', 'cause mustard-
seed so fine, pick dat up 'til morning/' or again, you must put salt and
129
pepper in the discarded skin.
Granny knew a charmed child when she saw one, and was re-
. . .
knew Aunt Mymee, and so did the others. Although they visited and re-
ceived her in turn, although she had lived in the cabin a few rods from
Granny's for years, not one of them ever went to bed at night without
hanging up a horse-shoe and a pair of wool-cards at the bed's head. Not
one of them failed to pour a cup of mustard or turnip-seed on the door-
step and hearth, so that she would have to count all those seeds before
she could go in at the door, or down the chimney to tie their hair into
knots ; to twist the feathers in their beds into balls as solid as stone ;
to
pinch them with cramps and rheumatism to ride on their chests, hold-
;
ing by their thumbs as by a bridle, while she spit fire at them till cock-
crow. Not one of them had any doubt as to her ability to jump out of
her skin whenever she pleased, and take the form of owl, black dog, cat,
wolf, horse, or cow. Not one of them merely suspected, she knew
Mymee could appear in two places at once, ride a broomstick or a bat
like a charger, and bring sickness and bad luck of all sorts on whomever
she pleased. 130
AFRICANISMS IN RELIGIOUS LIFE 259
Vampires are not common, but one Negro tells of a young girl con-
stantly declining while an old woman got better and better. This was
because the harridan sucked young folks' blood while they slept. "De
chillun dies, an' she keeps on alivin'."
Salt sprinkled thoroughly about the house and especially in the fire-
place; black pepper or a knife about the person; or matches in the hair,
all bring dire perturbation to these umbrageous visitors. Ha'nts, . . .
idea that the witch leaves her skin behind on going out, and among the
Vais it is thought that salt and pepper will prevent her getting back
into her hide. 133
haggling with them will anger them and bring on their vengeance;
260 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
she will not do this so that any one may see; they suck blood. Each
witch has a part of the body of which she is particularly fond. . . .
crows, vultures and parrots; into house-flies and fire-flies, into hyenas,
leopards, lions, elephants, bongo and all sasa animals, and also into
snakes." 134
It has long been held that the principal contribution of the Negro
to the culture of the Americas, and most particularly to the culture
of the United States, lies in the expression of his musical gift. 1
Since the "discovery" of the spirituals shortly after the Civil War,
and markedly in recent years with the spread of the "blues" and the
being well-known traits of white folk music. Only one such feature
is held to be of African derivation "leading lines sung by a single
voice, alternating with a refrain sung by the chorus/' Hornbostel
concluded that in the United States the Negroes have evolved a real
folk music which, while neither European nor African, is an expres-
sion of the African musical genius for adaptation that has come out
under contact with foreign musical values. "Had the Negro slaves
been taken to China instead of to America, they would have devel-
oped folk-songs in Chinese style"; as it was, they devised "songs
made ... in European style." The purely African element in this
music is the manner of singing these songs in motor behavior alone
;
8
G. B. Johnson. Their position holds that whatever African ele-
ments may be present in the spirituals they have not considered
to any extent the musical structure of other types of Negro song
found in the United States the correspondence between them and
the religious songs of the whites are so close and so numerous that
one need search no further. Some retention of African elements is
admitted to have been possible, but these are held to be of such slight
9
incidence as to be almost negligible.
Yet, we ask once again concerning this element of Negro life,
European and African music are considered all these must await
systematic recording, careful transcription, and concentrated analysis.
Far greater attention must be given to nonreligious folk music of
United States Negroes than has hitherto been accorded songs of
this kind. They have attracted a certain degree of attention from
those concerned with analyzing their words. But the actual melodies
and rhythms of work songs, of songs of recrimination and ridicule,
of prison songs, are needed to supplement the rather extensive col-
12
lections of spirituals available for study.
In the West Indies, except for Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica, and in
Guiana, almost no published materials can be found 13 even when un-
;
contacts these people have had with the English to assume this is
;
to fall into the same error committed when in the United States
268 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
only European sources are taken into account in studying the origins
of Negro songs.
Dr. Kolinskies analyses of the groups of related materials he has
studied may be sketched to document the difficulties with which re-
search into the problems of Negro music bristle. The songs of the
Guianas, when first investigated, were found to vary from almost
purely African to almost completely European; yet when the record-
ings from Africa were available, became necessary to revise this
it
first time the manipulation of the muscles of hips and buttocks that
are marks of good African dancing, or the simulation of motions
of sexual intercourse also found in certain quasi-ritual African
dances. Yet these latter are no more and no less lascivious to the
underground.
African types of dancing elsewhere, as in Africa itself, are found
in connection with various religious and secular situations. In the
More attention has been paid to folklore than to any other aspect
of New World Negro life. Not only is this true in the sense of the
ary expression have been collected since the Civil War. Moreover,
collectors have not failed to record these elements in the Negro
cultures of the West Indies and in West Africa as well as in the
United States, so that a large quantity of materials exist for com-
28
parative study.
Though some writers have stressed European and Indian influ-
ences in Negro tales, question of the retention of Afri-
there is little
eventually discovered.
The story is so characteristic of West Africa, that Africanists
have themselves long used Joel Chandler Harris's version of this
Negro tale from the United States as a point of comparative refer-
ence. There are some who maintain that the tale, as found both in this
Negro tales are not dissimilar to those already discussed where the
underlying unity of Old World culture must be taken into considera-
30
tion. As has already been stated, especially strong unity is found
in animal tales over the Old World, the important place of animal
stories in the repertory of Negroes in all the New World thus being
a reflection of the stimuli from Europe as well as Africa. The point
is best made if we again briefly summarize the distribution of such
tales. The Uncle Remus, or Anansi, stories found in the United
States, or Jamaica, which parallel animal tales all over the African
continent, also resemble so closely as to remove the similarities from
the dictates of chance the fables of Aesop, the Reynard cycle of
Europe, the Panchatantra of India, and the Jataka tales of China,
to name but a few of the best-known series. Stories recorded in the
Philippines, in Persia, and in Tibet, wherein animals are characters,
exhibit the same series of incidents combined into plots wherein
similar points are made. The characters show the greatest variation,
as might be expected but whether
; rabbit, tortoise, or spider figures
as the trickster in the New Worldand African Negro tales, or
jackal and crow figure in the stories of India and ancient Greece,
the animals do similar things in similar sequence for similar reasons.
Stories having human characters show the same tendency toward
wide distribution. The "Frau Holle" motif, that takes its name from
the version in the German tales collected by the Brothers Grimm,
offers an example of this. The story, found over all Europe and
Asia an almost perfect parallel to the German form has been re-
corded from Siberia is likewise widely spread in Africa, though
this has not been pointed out until recently when, through compari-
sons with Dutch Guiana Negro stories, African correspondences
31
hitherto overlooked were revealed. Another tale, best entitled by
the catch phase "The Magic Flight," that was long thought to be
restricted toAsia and Europe and, by diffusion, to the aboriginal
Indian inhabitants of the Americas, turns out to be Old World, with
a considerable distribution in West Africa and many correspond-
32
ences among American Negroes. Students of Negro lore in the
United States, who tend to refer the "John Henry" cycle to recent
events in the life of a definite Negro, may be freshly stimulated by
considering the implications of the
"Infant Terrible" 38 cycles of
Africa for their study of derivations.
The published materials in the field of folklore are so rich, indeed,
274 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
together a whole heap. Mrs. Wind useter go set down by de ocean and
talk and patch and crochet. They was jus' like all lady people. They
loved to talk about their chillun, and brag on 'em. Mrs. Water useter
say, "Look at my chillun! Ah got de biggest and de littlest in de world.
All kinds of chillun. Every color in de world, and every shape!" De
wind lady bragged louder than de water woman "Oh, but Ah got mo' :
different chilluns than anybody in de world. They flies, they walks, they
swims, they sings, they talks, they cries. They got all de colors from de
sun. Lawd, my chillun sho is a pleasure. 'Taint nobody got no babies
likemine." Mrs. Water got tired of hearin' 'bout Mrs. Wind's chillun
so she got so she hated 'em. One day a whole passle of her chillun
come to Mrs. Wind and says "Mama, wese thirsty. Kin we go git us
:
a cool drink of water ?" She says, "Yeah, chillun. Run on over to Mrs.
Water and hurry right back soon." When them chillun went to squinch
they thirst Mrs. Water grabbed 'em all and drowned 'em. When her
chillun didn't come home, de wind woman got worried. So she went
on down to de water and ast for her babies. "Good evenin', Mis' Water,
you see my chillun today?" De water woman tole her, "No-oo-oo."
Mrs. Wind knew her chillun had come down to Mrs. Water's house,
so she passed over de ocean callin' her chillun, and every time she call
de white feathers would come up on top of de water. And dat's how
come we got white caps on waves. It's de feathers comin' up when de
wind woman calls her lost babies. When you see a storm on de water,
36
it's de wind and de water fightin' over dem chillun.
As the small vocabulary of the jungle atrophied through disuse and was
soon forgotten, the contribution to the language made by the Gullah
Negroes is insignificant, except through the transformation wrought upon
"
a large body of borrowed English words. (The Black Border, pp. 17 f.)
Then Gonzales published what was taken to be a complete glossary
of Gullah. This contains about 1700 words, most of which are English
words misspelled to indicate the Negro's mispronunciation. The other
words in the glossary that are in reality African have been interpreted as
English words which the Negro was unable to pronounce. For instance, the
English phrase done for fat is given as being used by the Gullahs to mean
excessively fat (the assumption being that in the judgment of the Gullah
Negro when a person is very fat he is done for). But if Gonzales had had
enough training in phonetics to reproduce the word accurately, it would
have been ddfa, which is the Gullah word for fat, and if he had looked into
a dictionary of the Vai language, spoken in Liberia, or consulted a Vai
informant, he would have found that the Vai word for fat is dafa (~~ _)
41
lit., mouth full.
English foot) the Wolof dsogal, to rise used in Gullah in the term d^ogal
;
ever, perhaps none of it, is derived from sources other than English. In
vocabulary, in syntax, and pronunciation, practically all of the forms of
Gullah can be explained on the basis of English, and probably only a little
deeper delving would be necessary to account for those characteristics
that still seem strange and mysterious." "Generalizations are always dan-
gerous," he continues, "but it is reasonably safe to say that not a single
detail of Negro pronunciation or Negro syntax can be proved to have other
than an English origin." ("The English of the Negro," American Mercury,
June, 1924)
Mr. H. L. Mencken, in the 1937 edition of The American Language, says
that the Negroes have inherited no given-names from their African ances-
tors and that the native languages of the Negro slaves seem to have left
few marks upon the American language, (pp. 112, 523) On one Georgia
island alone, St. Simons, near Brunswick, I have collected more than 3000
African words that are used as given-names. Mr. Mencken very probably
never made any inquiries of the Gullahs concerning their given-names.
Dr. Reed Smith, of the University of South Carolina, says: "What the
Gullahs seem to have done was to take a sizeable part of the English vocab-
ulary as spoken on the coast by the white inhabitants from about 1700 on,
wrap their tongues around it, and reproduce it with changes in tonality,
pronunciation, cadence, and grammar to suit their native phonetic tend-
encies, andtheir existing needs of expression and communication. The
result has been called by one writer, 'the worst English in the world/ It
would certainly seem to have a fair claim to that distinction." "There are
curiously," he continues, "few survivals of native African words in Gullah,
a fact that has struck most students of the language"; and he lists about
twenty words which he thinks may be African in origin, but he cites no
parallels in the African languages. (Gullah, pp. 22, 23)
Dr. Guy B. Johnson, contributing to one of the chapters in T. J. Woofter's
Black Yeomanry, is of practically the same opinion as Dr. Reed Smith.
He says: "There are older Negroes in the Sea Islands who speak in such
a way that a stranger would have to stay around them several weeks before
he could understand them and converse with them to his satisfaction.
But this strange dialect turns out to be little more than the peasant English
LANGUAGE AND THE ARTS 279
of two centuries ago, modified to suit the needs of the slaves. From Midland
and Southern England came planters, artisans, shopkeepers, indentured
servants, all of whom had more or less contact with the slaves, and the
speech of these poorer white folk was so rustic that their more cultured
countrymen had difficulty in understanding them. From this peasant speech
and from the 'baby talk' used by masters in addressing them, the Negroes
developed that dialect, sometimes known as Gullah, which remains the
characteristic feature of the culture of the Negroes of coastal South Carolina
and Georgia. . The grammar of the dialect is the simplified English
. .
grammar taken over from the speech of the poorer whites. The use . . .
... the Gullah Negro when talking to strangers is likely to use speech
that is for the most part English in vocabulary, but when he talks to his
associates and to the members of his family, his
speech is different.
My first
phonograph recordings of the speech of the Gullah Negrpes
contain fewer African words by far than those made when I was no
longer a stranger to them. One has to live among them to know their
42
speech well.
imply that these dialects are without grammar, or that they repre-
sent an inability to master the foreign tongue, as is so often claimed.
if this hypothesis is true, certain results should follow when these
modes of speech are analyzed. In the first place, Negro linguistic
expression should everywhere manifest greater resemblances in
structure and idiom than could be accounted for by chance. Devia-
tions from the usage of the European languages, furthermore,
should all take the same direction, though the amount of deviation
from accepted usage must be expected to vary with the degree of
acculturation experienced by a given group. Finally, not only should
these deviations be in the same direction, but they should be in ac-
cord with the conventions that mark the underlying patterns of West
African languages.
Though this analysis was made some years ago, and therefore
does not include reference to some of the more recent works on
African languages, nor the studies of Haitian Creole that have ap-
peared since that time, it may be cited at length, since these fresh
data merely confirm its findings. Since this analysis was made from
the point of view of taki-taki, comparisons were made to modes of
Negro-English speech found elsewhere, but not to dialects deriving
LANGUAGE AND THE ARTS 281
We may name some of the characteristics that stand out as forms foreign
to the idiom of European languages, but which occur with a consistency
that characterises grammatical forms. Among these may be noted the
absence of sex-gender in pronouns, and the failure to utilise any methods
of indicating sex except by employing as prefix the word for "man" or
"woman," or the use of relationship terms, like "father," "mother,"
"brother," "sister"; the manner of indicating the possessive; of expressing
comparison; of employing nouns for prepositions of place. The use of a
series of verbs to express a single action, or the use of verbs to indicate
habitual and completed action also characterises this speech, as does the
employment of the verb "to give" as a preposition, the use of "to say"
to introduce objective clauses, making the only English translation pos-
sible the word "that," the use of "make" in the sense of "let," of "back"
to mean"again," "behind," "in back," and "after." Repetition of words
for emphasis is a regularly employed mechanism, and this form is also used
to indicate a more intense degree of the action, or to change a verb into a
M
noun, while the verb "to go" often carries the significance of "will."
Stylistic traits that appear regularly are the opening of many sentences
with the word "then," the change to the future tense to mark an explana-
tory interval between two actions which are separated from each other in
time, and the use of the adverb te to express emphatic distance, or effort,
or emotion, or degree. Phonetically, also, deviations from the pronunciation
of European words are quite regular, as, for example, the interchange of "r"
and "1"; the degree of nasalisation, about which we have already com-
mented; or the insertion of a "y" after "c" in such words as "car" and
"carry" and "can't"; or the tendency to end all words with a vowel, so
that "call" becomes kari or kali, "look" becomes luku, "must" changes
to musu-, the use of elision and the dropping of final syllables.
It soon became apparent that the characteristics which could be singled
out in the Negro-English of Paramaribo were also manifested in other
regions of the New World where Negroes speak English. Our first com-
282 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
parison was made with the speech of Jamaica, and in the following list
take out the fishes, one one (p. i) punt na fisi wan-wan
mak I bu'n you (p. 4) mcW mi bnn yn
belly full (p. 4) here funt
I will carry you go (p. 5)
mi sa tyari yu go
eat done (p. n) nyam kaba
Tiger study fe him (p. n) Tigri prakseri fo hem
knockey han' (p. 15) naki Jianu
mak me wring de neck t'row 'way mek* wi broke na neki trowe na
in de bag (p. 16) (iii na saka
see one little stone a river-side deh si wq* pi kin sity a libasei de
(p- sO
me nyam-nyam taya (p. 54) mi nyqm-nyqm tola
run go (p. 55) I? go
roll in filth today-today (p. 56) lolo na diti tide-tide
so after de eat an* drink done (p. so te den nyqm $n dr^ngi kaba
57)
at door-mout' (p. 75) na doro mtfo
an' went away to ground (p. 93) en gowe na gr?
y
night catch him on de way (p. 180) ne^ti kisi hem na pasi
(P- 455)
w'en Adjapa reach inside de bird (p. 451) . . .
an' her mother took one give to her pikin (p. 456)
he run come from inside de hole (p. 458)
. .took de man fo' de house ... (p. 458)
.
regions of Nigeria for more than ten years, where, in the course of his
everyday life, he had learned what English he knew.
'Dis princess, she palaver too much. If he marry dis man today, tomor-
row he go way leave 'um. He suffer everybody. He vex he fadder too much,
so he sell um go 'way. He no can kill he own
Daughter, so he sell go 'way.
When he never see he daughter no mo', he sorry now. He say, "Who find
daughter, I give dash plenty," say, "I give everyt'ing." Now dey bring him
come. Now he start make lau again. He fadder say, "You be my proper
LANGUAGE AND THE ARTS 285
blood," say, "I like you too much when you be quiet." But he make too
much trouble. Sell 'em again to Portuguese. White man take him go.
Dey de' fo' Whydah. Dey no go fo' sea yet. Dis princess he was
. . .
ploud. He was fine too much. He fine pass all woman. Dere was hole in
Allada, nobody mus' go. Princess he steal he fadder sandal at night. Nex'
day or woman see someone was in hole, come tell king. Everybody go for
look, see king foot. King vex, say, he no go. Princess he laugh, say, "Who
go? Look, you foot." ... He (Hwegbadja) give dem order again say,
if be somebody
go put faiah to anode* man house fo' burn anode' man
house, if sometime he no like 'em, he burn house, if he see, kill 'um, bring
him head come, show, say, "Dat man burn house." I see, I kill 'um. Den
if he tell dem so, den man have enemy, take man who do not'ing, cut
head and bring, den if he fin' man lie, he go kill 'um de same. Den he say,
if take small small
gyal (girl) no be big 'nough, if somebody spoil 'um
dey go kill 'um. Make nobody see people dey pass wit' load, go sell 'um.
If somebody do so, he go find out, he kill 'um . . . Den de people who
de' fo' odde' king country de' Ion com' fo' Hwegbadja, say, "If my fadde'
die, you go bury fo' me. To put fo' stick no good." ... So people like it
too much.'
Many of the idioms and phonetic shifts of Suriname speech, the West
Indies, and the United States appear in these excerpts: "too much" for
"very much," "sell go 'way" for "sell and send away," "bring him come"
for "bring him (her)," "take him go" for "take away," "dey de' fo' Whydah"
for "they are at Whydah," "dey no go fo' sea yet," literal translation of the
Suriname den no gofo si yete, "ploud" for "proud," "he fine pass all women,"
the African comparative that finds its Suriname equivalent in a mqi miro
da uma, "gyal" for "girl," "if somebody spoil 'em," the Suriname equiva-
"make nobody see people dey
lent of pori in the significance of "deflower,"
pass . ," metf nowq si suma den pasa, "Ion com" for IQ k^m^ and, finally,
. .
the use of the term "stick" to mean "tree," a usage which has its equivalent
in theSaramacca use of the term p<%t, also "stick," for "tree."
In Dahomey, a possession of France, this was the only English we heard.
French has little pidgin, yet occasionally, in contact with a native who had
not been educated in the schools, we would hear unefois, the French equiva-
lent of theSuriname wq tr?, used exactly as the people of the Sea Islands
employ "one time." We would hear a native telling another to go doucement,
doucement,safri, safri, as the Suriname Negro has it, while phonetic shifts
which cause the White man to eat "flied potatoes" in Nigeria and in Suri-
name, make him eat pommes flites in the French territory of Dahomey, or
cause a native to point out a young woman walking along the road with
56
the remark "Cest mon flere, lit. Cest femme, eft?"
pursuing the subject of correspondences between New World and
Still
West African Negro Engli^, we collected more tales in pidgin among the
Ashanti of the British territory of the Gold Coast, among some of these
very people to whom the Suriname Negroes, in their folk-lore, owe their
286 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
w'y you big man sabi war, you no wan go war, sen' pikin go?
While with the Ashanti, we were also able to obtain some characteristic
expressions from a member of the Mossi people from the Northern Terri-
tories of the Gold Coast, whose pidgin was as untutored and as rich in flow
as any we heard in West Africa.
So you be chief pikin. Make you sing, make me see. W'en you be
chief pikin, me go know,
he cover he sikin all 59
w'en dey get up fo' dance, now dance go' 'bout six ya'ds
he run go bush wit' pikin
dis firs' time he de' fo' town
rabbits den chop all bush meat60
so he cali a house again, say . . .
Still other examples are to be found in Cronise and Ward's Temne tales.
These are rendered in pidgin, and beside the idftmatic expressions and con-
structions cited by the authors in their "Introduction," 61 the following may
also be found:
LANGUAGE AND THE ARTS 287
(p. 43)
De ooman ax de man: "Nar true?" (p. 47)
Spider go nah puttah-puttah, he look sotay (until) ... (p. 48)
"Na play I duh play" (p. 48)
One day me bin say Bowman long pass dis tick ... (p. 48)
One net big rain fa' down (p. 55)
Dat make tay (until) today (p. 63) . .. .
Make I tie um 'roun yo' mout', make I hole um, so w'en I duh
shake, shake, make I no fa' down (p. 72)
I done bring Trorkey come (p. 75)
Dem beef all come, dey try, dey no able (p. 83)
... he no bin 'tan' lek today ... (p. 93)
Hungri tern (famine) done ketch dis Africa (p. 117)
De two beef no' know say ... (p. 120)
... he drag dem nah sho' ... (p. 121)
. make we come go; ef no so, ef he meet yo', he go
. . kill yo' (p. 185)
Spider he smart man fo' true, true (p. 213)
W'en 'fraid ketch Lepped (p. 225) . . .
The following list gives some of the resultant Twi idioms, with their
literal meaning expressed in English words:
The above list shows that many of the idioms peculiar to Paramaribo,
Jamaica, Andros Islands, and the Sea Islands are literal translations of Twi.
The presence of similar idiomatic expressions in Yoruba, Fp, Ewe and Hausa
speech, and as reported by Cronise and Ward and others, leads to the
further hypothesis that these idioms are basic to many, if not all, of the
West African tongues.
The discussion of grammatical constructions of non-English char-
acter gave results equally enlightening :
complete discussion, a few examples will make the point that in this, as in
the instance of many of the idioms whose literal translation we have given,
the peculiarities of Negro speech are primarily due to the fact that the
Negroes have been using words from European languages to render literally
the underlying morphological patterns of West African tongues.
Let us consider first the tendency of New World Negroes to use the verb
"to give" for the English preposition "for." In Ewe64 na, "to give" is used
in just this manner, and we read that ". what one does to another is
. .
done for him and is, as it were, given to him, e.g., he said a word (and)
. . .
gave (if) to the person, i.e., he said a word to the person; he bought a horse
(and) gave (it) to me, i.e., he bought me a horse."
In rendering Ashanti tales, it is explained that ma, which is translated
65
by the preposition "for" is really the verb "to give."
In Ga, ha, "to give," is used as we would use "for" in English, when em-
66
ployed with persons. The Fante-Akan language utilizes the verb ma, "to
67
give" as an equivalent of the English preposition "for"; while, turning
to a Yoruba text we find a phrase which, literally translated, reads "//$
prennent vont donnent au roi," and has the meaning of "They bring to the
68
king."
In the matter of gender, we find in grammars of West African languages
the explanation of the seeming lack of differentiation of sex in the use of
pronouns. We have noted how "he" and "she" are interchanged in West
Africa and Suriname; how, in the West Indies and the Gullah Islands,
"he" is employed to indicate both a man and a woman. Ewe, we find,
"has no grammatical gender." 69 Do the Ewe, then, fail to distinguish per-
sons who Not at all; they must, however, employ nouns, such
differ in sex?
as "man," "woman," "youth," "maiden," "father," "mother," or they must
add either -su, "male," or -no, "female," to a given word as a suffix. Yet
this latter method is that of New World Negro English, as, for example,
when the Suriname Negro speaks of a man-pikin, a boy, as against an
70
umq-pikin, a girl. In Ga, as in Ewe, gender is designated by the prefixing
or suffixing of an element, in this case, yo for a woman and nu for a man,
though there are a few differentiating words such as "husband," "wife,"
"father," "mother," and the like. Similarly, in the related Fante-Akan
71
speech, by affixing particles or utilizing different words, that the dif-
it is
is also used with the meaning of "between," "among," "in the midst of."
Tapu, (Ewe dzi\ means not only "top" but also "the sky," and "over,"
"on," and "above." Inisei in Suriname (Ewe me), as in Africa, carries the
significance- not only of "inside" but also of "the context of a word of
speech." Na baka is difficult to translate into English until its equivalence
to the Ewe megbe perceived, when it becomes clear that it not only signi-
is
"
fies "the back" but also "behind" and "after" and "again. last example A
(though this does not exhaust the list) shows the derivation of the numerous
curious uses of the taki-taki word hede, "head." The Ewe equivalent, /a,
besides its initial significance, means "point" or "peak," "on account of,"
"because," "therefore," and "for that reason," the last being the exact
translation of the Suriname word in such a phrase as fd dati ede. For G%
we find similar constructions reported. 74 Thus, the G$ people say, "he looked
at his face" for "he looked in front of him"; "my garden is at the house's
back" for "my garden is behind the house"; "he went to their middle" for
"he went among them"; "walk my back" for "walk behind me." In Fante
the same construction is found. 75
If one wishes to know the grammatical bases of such usage as the reflexive
pronoun, denfom den s\efi\ the order in which those in a compound subject
involving the speaker are named, mi nqyga yu; the cohortive form, which
expresses an invitation, as meV wi go for "let us go"; forms like mi de go,
mi ben go\ the use of a separate term (like the taki-taki kaba) to denote
completed action; the use of the phrase a taki, "to say," to introduce objec-
tive phrases; the use of the term "more" ("surpass") 76 to make the com-
parative form of the adjective, he will find all these discussed in grammars
of West African languages. Let us here only indicate, from Westermann,
some other rules of Ewe that, as for other West African tongues, still are
operative for taki-taki. When one says, "he is four years old," he says "he
77
has received four years" the Suriname a kisi fo yari kaba] if one wishes
to say "I know something," he says "I have come to know something," 78
taki-taki mi de kom sabi wq sani. In Ewe, for "tell the Governor," one
says, "say it give Governor say," our taki gi Gramq taki?* the Ewe use
of the double verb occurs also in taki-taki as krgipi a knipi*
paring taki-taki with Negro English in the New World, pidgin English in
Africa, Ashanti idioms, and West African grammatical forms as illustrated
in Yoruba, Ewe, F:?, G%, Twi, Mende, Hausa and other West African
languages.
1. found in Jamaican speech, in the Bahamas,
Parallels to taki-taki were
and Sea Islands of the United States.
in the
2. Similar parallels were also found in pidgin English as spoken in Nigeria
were met with in African pidgin, and it was possible to trace them to
African speech. 81
Therefore, it must be concluded that not only taki-taki, but the speech of
the other regions of the New World we have cited, and the West African
pidgin dialects, are all languages exhibiting, in varying degrees of intensity,
similar African constructions and idioms, though employing vocabulary
that is predominantly European.
Such matters as the fate in the New World of the tonal elements
in West African speech, where, as has been indicated, tone has
semantic as well as phonemic significance, remain to be studied. It
isa most difficult problem requiring a long-term and highly technical
analysis of Negro speech in various parts of the New World. That
the peculiarly "musical" quality of Negro-English as spoken in the
United States and the same trait found in the speech of white South-
82
erners represent a non functioning survival of this characteristic of
African languages is entirely possible, especially since this same
"musical" quality is prominent in Negro-English and Negro-French
everywhere. One Negro who was faced with the practical task of
distinguishing the registers in the tonal system of a West African
83
language has stated that he was greatly aided in this task by ref-
erence to the cadences of Negro speech he knew from Harlem. When
he was confronted with the need of mastering the especially difficult
combinations of tones in Ifek, the registers of such a phrase as
"Yeah, boss," ( "^ ) greatly simplified his task. That such an ex-
perience may offer a methodological hint for future research on the
survival of tone in the speech of New World Negroes, and espe-
cially those of the United States, is not out of the range of possibility.
The
materials adduced above as regards vocabulary, phonetics,
grammar, and idiom in Negro speech in this country are thus to
be regarded as a mere beginning of a systematic research program.
They however, more desirable and acceptable, if only from the
are,
CONCLUSIONS
1. The myth of the Negro past has been outlined and the unfor-
tunate consequences for scholarship made apparent where scholars
rely on assumption rather than fact. It has been seen how student
after student has been content to repeat propositions concerning
Negro endowment and the Negro past without critical analysis.
Those who have taken the African background into account at all
have failed in the methodological task of assessing the literature to
ascertain whether earlier statements retain validity in the light of
modern findings. Where concern has been to explain the divergence
of Negro institutions from those of the white majority, it has been
uncritically held that nothing of Africa could have remained as a
functioning reality in the life of Negroes in this country. This his-
torical blind spot has resulted in a geographical provincialism, so
that students have never pressed into effective research, such recog-
nition as they have shown of the importance of comparative studies
among Negroes living in other parts of the New World.
2. The acceptance of this mythology has been shown to be as
serious for the practical man
as for scholars. Its function as a jus-
tification for prejudice has operated to aggravate the situation of
the Negro, providing deep-lying sanctions for surface irritations
that have their roots in convictions regarding the quality of African
culture. The existence of a popular belief in the African character
of certain phases of Negro custom has been seen not to vitiate the
conceptual reality of the mythological system, since it is the aspects
of Negro life customarily deemed least desirable that are held to
be African, and are thus regarded as vestiges of a "savage" past.
That the existence of survivals has been denied rather than inves-
tigated shows that the implications of this point of view have not
been missed by men of good will, and this fact but emphasizes the
failure of scholars to face the question of Africanisms and apply to
their study all the resources of their disciplines.
292
CONCLUSIONS 293
If the component parts of the system are taken one by one, the
specific findings applicable to each may be reviewed in these terms :
2. Only the poorer stock of Africa was enslaved, the more intel-
294 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
It has been shown that the history of slavery gives little evidence
of any kind of selectivity in the capture of Negroes. The two most
important methods of procuring slaves, kidnaping and capture in
war, were clearly not such as to handicap those of lesser intelligence
or to give those of higher ability any advantage in escaping the
slavers. This is especially true because kidnapers were more likely
to make off with young Negroes than others, while the fact that
in West African warfare there was no category of noncombatant
5. Since the Negroes were brought from all parts of the African
continent, spoke diverse languages, represented greatly differing
bodies of custom, and, as a matter of policy, were distributed in
the New World so as to lose tribal identity, no least common de-
nominator of understanding or behavior could have possibly been
worked out by them.
No element in this system has been more completely accepted
than the assumptions that the Negroes of this country were derived
from the most diverse ethnic stocks and linguistic units over all of
Africa that, as it is phrased, the slaves were brought to the trading
;
the United States as elsewhere, with the language and customs of the
slave-owners.
A reexamination of the facts concerning separation in the New
World of slaves coming from the same tribe, in the light of modern
portunity to live together, and that they had the will and ability to
continue their customary modes of behavior, the cultures of Africa
were so savage and relatively so low in the scale of human civilisa-
tion that the apparent superiority of European custom as observed
in the behavior of their masters would have caused and actually did
cause them to give up such aboriginal traditions as they may other-
wise have desired to preserve.
for example, this is seen to have resulted in the use of the unsuper-
vised leisure of such specialists to preserve and further the reten-
tion of African traditions.
A factor of importance, consistently unrecognized in evaluating
the acculturative processes operative among the Negroes, has been
found to be the African traditional attitude toward what is new,
what is foreign. Aboriginally manifested most strongly in the field
of religion, where both conquered and conquerors often took over
the gods of their opponents, it has operated to endow the African
298 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
special cultural traits are regarded with pride; where the past is
CHAPTER I
1
"The Conflict and Fusion of Cultures with Special Reference to the Negro,"
Journal of Negro History, 4:116, 1919.
2
The Negro Family in the United States, Chicago, 1939, pp. 21 f.
*
"The Negro Family in the United States" (book review), American Journal
of Sociology, 14:799, 1940.
4
Shadow of the Plantation, Chicago, 1934, p. 3.
5
Brown America, the Story of a New
Race, New York, 1931, p. II.
6
Ibid., pp. 10 f.
7
The Relation of the Alabama- Georgia Dialect to the Provincial Dialects of
Great Britain, Baton Rouge, 1935, p. 64.
8
Folk Culture on St. Helena Island, South Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C, 1930,
p. 6.
9
The Etiquette of Race Relations in the South, Chicago, 1937, passim.
10
Thus, in a an inquirer after African survivals in the behavior of
letter to
Negroes of the United States (Mr. Joseph Ralph of Long Beach, Calif.), written
early in 1925, the following statement was made :
What there is today in Harlem distinct from the white culture that surrounds
it is,as far as I am able to see, merely a remnant from the peasant days in the
South. Of the African culture, not a trace. Even the spirituals are an expression of
the emotion of the Negro playing through the typical religious patterns of white
America. ... As we turn to Harlem we see ... it represents, as do all American
communities which it resembles, a case of complete acculturation. And so, I return
again to my reaction on first seeing this center of Negro activity, as the complete
description of it :
"Why, it's the same pattern, only a different shade 1"
Two years later the identical point of view was stressed ("Acculturation and the
American Negro," Southwestern Political and Social Science Quarterly, 8:216,
224, 1927) :
Perhaps the best instance which may be given of this fashion in which one people
may accept and validate for themselves the culture of another folk is contained in
the Negroes of this country, particularly in the Negroes who have migrated to
the northern cities and settled there in large communities The African Negro . . .
may be of the same racial stock as some of his American brothers. But culturally,
they are as widely separated as the Bostonian whose ancestry came to this country
in the Mayflower, and the descendant of the King of Ashanti who lives today in
West Africa.
300
REFERENCES 301
In this latter paper, the relationship between physical type and ability to handle
one culture as against another was primarily the subject under discussion, and
there is no reason to assume that the conclusion reached in the argument, that such
a relationship cannot be shown, is invalid. Yet the sentences quoted, when con-
sidered solely in the light of the principal concern of our discussion here, show
that Negro behavior was believed to be "the same pattern, only a different shade"
from that of the general white population in every aspect of activity.
11
The methodological challenge this research presents, one which has by no
means been adequately met, is in itself of real moment. For since no adequate
attack on it is limited to any one discipline, or to any single geographic region,
Valley, New York, 1937 Harold Courlander, Haiti Singing, Chapel Hill, 1940.
;
29
M. J. Herskovits, "African Gods and Catholic Saints in New World Negro
Belief," American Anthropologist, 39:635-643, 1937.
A. Ramos, O Folk-Lore Negro do Brasil; Fernando Ortiz, Los Negros
80
York, 1938; C. K. Meek, A Sudanese Kingdom, Oxford, 1931, and Law and Au-
thority in a Nigerian Tribe, 1937; a d the volumes of the journal Africa. Unpub-
lished results of field work done in West Africa under fellowship grants of the
Social Science Research Council by W. R. Bascom (among the Yoruba, 1937-
1938), Joseph Greenberg (among the Hausa and Maguzawa, 1938-1939), and by
J. S. Harris (among the Ibo, 1939-1940), are also of considerable importance in
filling out our knowledge of the range of West African custom. The wealth of
materials available on Gold Coast tribes alone is strikingly indicated by the num-
ber of titles listed in A. W. Cardinall, A Bibliography of the Gold Coast, Accra
48
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, Chapel Hill, 1926, pp. 8 fl., passim. Refer-
ences are to Tillinghast, to early travelers such as Bosnian, and to later travelers
such as Cruickshank or Miss Kingsley.
49
Pp. 20 f .
60
Ibid., p. 24.
61
Ibid., p. 42.
52
W. D. Wcathcrford and C. S. Johnson, Race Relations, New York, 1934, pp.
27 f. ;
the footnote reference appended to the passage is to Franz Boas, The Mind
of Primitive Man, New York, 1910, Chap. I.
53
See Chap. III.
64
"Voodoo Worship and Child Sacrifice in Hayti," Journal of American Folk-
Lore, i :i7f., 1888.
After Freedom, New York, 1939, p. xi.
65
66
The English Language in America, New York, 1925 (2 vols.), and "The
English of the Negro," American Mercury, 2:iQofF., 1924.
57
The English Language in America, Vol. I, pp. 6of. and 155, For an inde-
pendent analysis of Krapp's position, see p. 278.
68
'The English of the Nej?ro," p. 190.
69
M. J. Herskovits, "The Ancestry of the American Negro," The American
Scholar, 8:Q3f., 1938-1 939-
60
Journal of Negro History, 22:367, 1937.
61
E. F. Frazier, "Traditions and Patterns of Negro Family Life in the United
States," in E. B. Reuter, Race and Culture Contacts, New York, 1934, p. 194.
:
CHAPTER II
2
Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa Performed Under the Direction and
Patronage of the African Association in the Years 1795, 1796, and 1797, London,
1799 (2nd ed.).
8
Cf. M. J. and F. S. Herskovits, "A Footnote to the History of Negro Slav-
ing," Opportunity, Ii:i78f., 1933.
4 M. L. E. Moreau de St. de la partie jrangaise de
Mery, Description . . . I'Isle
Saint- Domingue, Philadelphia, 1797-98, Vol. I, pp. 237 f.
5
Personal communication.
6
David D. Wallace, The Life of Henry Laurens . . . , New York, 1915, pp.
76 f.
7
Phillips, American Negro Slavery, p. 43. Just how Phillips reached his con-
clusion regarding the pygmoid character of these Negroes cannot be said, but his
comment bespeaks slight knowledge of the geography and ethnic types of the
region.
Ramos, O F oik-Lore Negro do Brasil, passim.
8
Cf.
9
Personal communication.
10
La Traite et VEsclavage des Congolais par les Europeens, Wettern, Belgium,
1929, pp. 88 f. The reference to Grandpre, a slave trader whose experience cov-
ered more than thirty years along the African coast is contained in a volume by
this dealer entitled, Voyage d la Cote Occidentale d'Ajrique fait dans les annees
1786 et 1787, Paris, 1801, Vol. I, pp. 223 f. For further discussion of the sources
of Congo slaves by Rinchon see his Le Trafic Negrier, d'apres les livres de com-
merce du capitaine gantois Pierre-Ignace-Levin Van Alstein, Brussels, 1938, pp.
89 ff.
the warlike Ashanti and Dahomeans, for example! is taken from Tillinghast's
excogitations, to be found on page 10 of his work.
10
The American Race Problem, p. 133.
304
REFERENCES 305
20
"The Conflict and Fusion of Cultures /' Journal of Negro History, p. 117. . . .
21
Anthony Benezet, Some Historical Account of Guinea, Philadelphia, 1771.
22
Race Relations, p. 124. Where these authors obtained the spellings of tribal
names they use cannot be said, but the errors are striking Wydyas for Whydahs,
Fulis for Fulas, etc.
28
The Negro in the New World, pp. 82, 133, 275 f., 314.
24
Ibid., p. 470.
25
Nantes au XVIII 6 siecle; I'ere des Negriers (1714-1774), d'apres des docu-
ments inedits, Paris, 1931.
26
E.g., Du Bois, Black Folk, Then and Now, p. 143.
27
Le Trafic Negrier , pp. 304 f., based on preceding tables.
. . .
28
Geschichte des Missionen der evangelischen Briider auf den Inseln S. Thomas,
S. Croix und S. Jan, Barby, 1777, PP- 270 ff.
29
Some of the relevant passages from Oldendorp are to be found in M. J.
Herskovits, "On the Provenience of New World Negroes," Social Forces, 12 1250 f.,
1933-
30
J. J. Beschryving van Guiana, of de Wilde Kust in Suid-
Hartsinck,
America Amsterdam, 1770; Capt. J. G. Stedman, Narrative of a five years'
. . .
(English trans.), London, 1721 (2nd ed.) Capt. Wm. Snelgrave, A New Account ;
35
"The Slave Trade in South Carolina Before the Revolution/' American His-
torical Review, 33 :8og-828, 1928 Documents Illustrative of the Slave Trade to
;
**Ibid., p. 318.
Ibid., pp. 43, 45.
40
M. Herskovits, "The Significance of West Africa for Negro Research,"
J.
computations from Donnan, op. cit., Vol. IV, pp. 175 ff., passim.
loc. cit. ;
42
Op. cit., Vol. IV, pp. 278 ff., passim. The points of origin in this table are
equated as closely as possible with those in the preceding one; most notable is
the fact that only 1,168 slaves were brought in ships sailing from "Benin," "Bonny,"
"New Calabar," and "Old Calabar."
43
Le Trafic Negrier f pp. 247 . . . ff.
44
Personal communication.
45
These figures are to be found in M. J. Herskovits, "The Significance of West
Africa for Negro Research," loc. cit., p. 27.
46
Stephen Fuller, Two Reports . . . on the Slave-Trade, London, 1798, pp.
20 ff.
47
Cf. also L. E. Bouet-Willaumez, Commerce et Traite des Noirs aux Cotes
Occidentals d'AJrique, Paris, 1848; particularly Part II and maps.
48
Rinchon, Le Trafic Negrier , pp. 274 ff. the author's sources are indi-
. . .
;
Herskovits, "The Significance of West Africa for Negro Research/ loc. cit. f
pp. 27 f.
CHAPTER III
Barbot, "A Description of the Coast of North and South Guinea /' Church- . . .
ill's Voyages, Vol. VI, London, 1732; Robert Norris, Memoirs of the Reign of
Studies, London, 1899; Robert H. Nassau, Fetichism in West Africa; Forty Years'
Observation of Native Customs and Superstitions, New York, 1904.
10
The Negro in Africa and America, p. 28.
II
Collected during field work in Eastern Nigeria, 1938-1939.
12
"Land and Labour in a Cross River Village, Southern Nigeria," Geographical
Journal, 90:24-51, 1937.
18
Op. cit., p. 29.
"Ibid., p. 31.
19
Ibid., p. 33-
16
Ibid., pp. 31 f.
17
Ibid., p. 72.
18
Ibid., p. 80.
19
Ibid., p. 86.
20
Democracy and Race Friction, pp. 82 f. A
footnote reference after the first sen-
tence of the quotation is to an article by Reinsch, "The Negro Race and European
Civilization/* American Journal of Sociology, 11:155, 1005. Reinsch's paper, one
of the most extreme examples of the position being considered here, is not cited
because,, except for Mecklin, references to it are practically never encountered.
21
The American Race Problem, New York, 1927 (ist ed.), pp. 197 ff.
22
Ibid. (2nd ed.), pp. 310!
18 "
'Secret Societies/ Religious Cult-Groups, and Kinship Units among the
West African Yoruba," Unpublished Doctor's Thesis, Northwestern University,
I939-
24
Ashanti, pp. 90 f.
28
Nights with Uncle Remus, Boston, 1911 Uncle Remus Returns, Boston, 1918;
;
28
Religion and Art in Ashanti, passim.
29
Cf. numerous articles in Africa, London Journal de la Soc. des Africanistes,
;
81
"Ritual Festivals and Social Cohesion in the Hinterland of the Gold Coast/'
American Anthropologist, 38:590-604; Marriage Law Among the Tallensi, Accra
(Gold Coast), 1937; "Communal Fishing and Fishing Magic in the Northern
Territories of the Gold Coast," four. Royal Anth. Inst., 67:131-142, 1937; "Social
and Psychological Aspects of Education in Taleland," Supplement to Africa, xi,
No. 4, London, 1938; M. and S. L. Fortes, "Food in the Domestic Economy of
the Tallensi," Africa, 9:237-276, 1936.
82
Deborah Lifszyc and Denise Paulme, "Les Animaux dans le Folklore Dogon,"
Rev. de Folklore Franc, ais et de Folklore Colonial, 6:282-292, 1936; "La Fete des
Semailles en 1935 chez les Dogon de Sanga," Jour, de la Soc. des Africanistes,
6:95-110, 1936; Michel Leiris and Andre Schaeffner, "Les rites de circoncision
chez les Jour, de la Soc. des Africanistes, 6:141-162, 1936; Marcel
Dogon de Sanga,"
Griaule, "Blason totemiques des Dogon," Jour, de la Soc. des Africanistes, 7 :69~78,
1937; Denise Paulme, "La Divination par les chaculs chez les Dogon de Sanga,"
Jour, de la Soc. des Africanistes, 7:1-14, 1937; Deborah Lifszyc, "Les formules
propitiatoires chez les Dogon," Jour, de la Soc. des Africanistes, 7:33-56, 1937.
83
C. D. Forde, "Land and Labour in a Cross River Village" "Fission and ;
88
Negres Gouro et Gagou (centre de la Cote d'lvoire), Paris, 1924; Religion,
Mceurs et Coutumes des Agnis de la Cote d'lvoire, Paris, 1932.
89
The Northern Tribes of Nigeria, London, 1925 (2 vols.) A Sudanese King- ;
dom, London, 1031 Tribal Studies in Northern Nigeria, London, 1931 (2 vols.)
; ;
"The Kulu in Northern Nigeria," Africa, 7:257-269, 1934; Law and Authority in
a Nigerian Tribe, Oxford, 1937.
40
In the Shadow of the Bush, London, 1916 Life in Southern Nigeria, London, ;
308 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
London, 1927.
Fertility Cults,
^Anthropological report on the Edo-speaking peoples in Nigeria, London, 1910;
Anthropological report on the Ibo-speaking Peoples of Nigeria, London, 1913-1914
(6 vols.).
42
Urwald-documente. Vier jahre unter den crossflussnegern Kameruns, Berlin,
1908.
48
Die Pangwe, Berlin, 1913 (2 vols.) ; Die Baja, ein Negerstantm in Mittleren
Sudan, Stuttgart, 1934.
44
"Notes on the ethnography of the BaMbala," Jour. Royal Anth. Inst., 35:
398-426, 1905 "Notes ethnographiques sur les peuples communement appeles
;
Bakuba, ainsi que sur les peuplades apparentees. Les Bushongo," Annales de la
Musee du Congo Beige. Ethnographic, Anthropologie, ser. 3, t. 2, Brussels, 1910;
"Notes ethnographiques sur les populations habitant les bassins du Kasai et du
Congo beige/' Annales de la Musee du Congo Beige. Ethnographie, Anthropologie,
sir. 3, t. 2, Brussels, 1910.
45
"The Ovimbundu of Angola," Field Museum of Natural History, Anth. Ser.,
21 190-362, Chicago, 1934.
46
Collection de Monographies ethnographiques, Brussels, 1907-1911, Vols. I-
VIII.
47
Among Congo Cannibals, Philadelphia, 1913; Among the Primitive BaKongo,
London, 1914.
48
Ad. Cureau, Les Socictes Primitives de I'Ajrique quatoriale, Paris, 1921 ;
1
Redfield, Linton and Herskovits, "Memorandum for the Study of Accultura-
tion," American Anthropologist,
loc. cit., p. 152, IV, C.
2
An Evidence delivered before a Select Committee of the
Abstract of the
House of Commons in the Years 1790, and 1791 London, 1791, pp. 38 ff. . . .
8
An Account of the Slave Trade on the Coast of Africa, London, 1/88, p. 30.
4
A New Account of some parts of Guinea, and the Slave-Trade pp. 162 ff. . . .
,
6
American Negro Slavery, p. 35.
6
"American Slave Insurrections before 1861," Journal of Negro History, 22:
303 ft- 1937-
I
Ibid., pp. 302 f. The and the captain's statement are
citation to the quotation
Donnan, Documents Trade to America, Vol. Ill, pp. 293,
Illustrative of the Slave
325 ; Cases Concerning American Slavery
that to the lawsuit is Catterall, Judicial
and the Negro, Vol. I, pp. 19 f., where a full description of the revolt on which
action was based is to be read. Other instances of revolt insurance are cited by
Wish as these are found in the same works, Donnan, Vol. Ill, p. 217, and Catterall,
Vol. Ill, p. 568.
8
Cf. Ramos, The Negro in Brazil, pp. 24 f., for a discussion of this same point
as concerns Brazil.
9
Herskovits, Life in a Haitian Valley, pp. 59 f. references to data cited will be
;
3:29-32, 1918: see also Ramos, ibid., pp. 24 ff., and Johnston, The Negro in the
New World, pp. 95 f., for a long series of later Brazilian slave revolts.
II
Stedman, Narrative of a five years' expedition against the Revolted
Cf.
Negroes of Suriname, passim; M. J. and F. S. Herskovits, Rebel Destiny, passim.
This most recent incident has not been published, as far as is known.
12
L. A. Pendleton, "Our New Possessions the Danish West Indies," Journal
of Negro History, 2:267-288, 1917. The data concerning the revolt are from C. E.
Taylor, Leaflets from the Danish West Indies, London, 1888.
13
W. Westergaard, "Account of the Negro Rebellion on St. Croix, Danish West
Indies, 1759," Journal of Negro History, n 150-61, 1926.
14
Pendleton, op. cit., pp. 277 ff.
15
See p. 90; see also Phillips, American Negro Slavery, p. 464.
16
Herskovits, Life in a Haitian Valley, pp. 60 ff. citations to sources are ap- ;
revolt at 1675, and gives slightly differing versions of subsequent events from
those of Johnston.
309
3io THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
20
The best source for the Maroon uprising and deportation is Bryan Edwards,
The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West Indies,
Vol. I,Appendix No. 2, pp. 522 ff.
21
American Negro Slavery, p. 466.
Cf. Phillips,
22 The Homes of the New World, New York, 1868, Vol. II, p. 346.
28
Ibid., pp. The Luccomees, as far as can be discovered, are the counterpart
331 f.
of the people termed Yoruba or Nago by the French and British writers.
24
The Rise of American Civilisation, New York, 1930 (i-vol. ed.).
25
Fred A. Shannon, Economic History of the United States, New York, 1934,
p. 324.
26
The Rise of the Common Man, 1830-1850, New York, 1935, pp. 282 f.
27
Curtis P. Nettels, The Roots of American Civilization, New York, 1938, p.
468; Guion G. Johnson, Ante-Bellum North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 1937, pp. 510 ff.
28
Wish, "American Slave Insurrections before 1861," pp. 306 ff.; Aptheker,
"American Negro Slave Revolts," Science and Society, 1 1512-538, 1937, and Negro
Slave Revolts in the United States, New York, 1939.
29
Negro Slave Revolts in the United States, pp. i6f.
80
Ibid., pp. 71 f.
81
"The Slave Insurrection Panic of 1856," Journal of Southern History, 5 :2o6,
I939-
^ 2
Ibid., p. 222.
88
This revolt has been the inspiration of a powerful novel, almost alone in its
exploitation of this type of situation Arna Bontemps, Black Thunder, New York,
1936.
84
C. Ballagh, A History of Slavery in Virginia, Baltimore, 1902, p. 89.
J.
85
See Herbert Aptheker, "Maroons within the Present Limits of the United
States," Journal of Negro History, 24:167-184, 1939; and Joshua R. Giddings,
The Exiles of Florida, Columbus, Ohio, 1858.
86
B. Schrieke, Alien Americans, a Study of Race Relations, New York, 1936,
pp. 123 ff.
87
Frederick L. Olmsted, A Journey in the Back Country, New York, 1863,
p. 228.
M Ibid., pp. 65 f.
89
Olmsted, A
Journey in the Seaboard Slave States, New York, 1856, pp. 481 f.
40
Ibid., pp. 480 f.
41
Ibid., p. loo.
42
Ibid., p. 91.
48
fbid., p. 388.
44
Economic History of Virginia in the Seventeenth Century, New York, 1907,
Vol. II, p. 108.
45
Slavery in the United States, New York, 1837, pp. 69 f.
46
W. S. Drewry, Slave Insurrections in Virginia, 1830-1865, Washington, 1900,
p. 27-
47
The Plantation Overseer, as Revealed in his Letters, Northampton (Mass.),
1925, pp. 20 f.
48
The Negro in Maryland, a Study of the Institution of Slavery, Baltimore,
1889, pp. 132 f.
49
A Journey in the Back Country, p. 476.
50
William Still, The Underground Railroad, Philadelphia, 1872.
81
Ibid., p. 57-
62
Ibid., pp. 58 f.
68
Harvey Wish, "Slave Disloyalty under the Confederacy," Journal of Negro
History, 23 :435-450, 1938 ; Herbert Aptheker, The Negro in the Civil War, New
York, 1938.
54
Cf. Elizabeth Hyde Botume, First Days amongst the Contrabands, Boston,
1893, for a vivid picture of the reaction of the Negroes in this situation.
REFERENCES 311
85
The Homes of the New World, Vol. II, p. 338.
M Description . . . de la partie jrangaise de I'Isle Saint Domingue, Vol. I, pp.
29 f-
87
Cf. M. J. and F. S. Herskovits, "A Footnote to the History of Negro Slav-
ing," loc. cit., and M. J. Herskovits, "The Social History of the Negro," loc. cit., pp.
239 ff-
68
Nouveau Voyage aux Isles d'Ameriquc, Vol. II, p. 39.
59
A New Account of some Parts of Guinea, and the Slave-Trade . . .
, pp.
158 f.
60
An Account of the Slave Trade on the Coast of Africa, p. 18.
61
M. J.and F. S. Herskovits, "A Footnote to the History of Negro Slaving,"
loc. cit., p. 178.
CHAPTER V
1
The Negro Family in the United States, pp. 5 ff.
2
See pp. 11-12.
8
Guion G. Johnson, A Social History of the Sea Islands, with Special Refer-
ence to St. Helena Island, South Carolina, Chapel Hill, 1930, p. 31.
4
Ramos, The Negro in Brazil, pp. 17 ff.
5
The Plantation Overseer, as Revealed in his Letters, p. 3.
6
The Southern Plantation, A Study in the Development and the Accuracy of a
Tradition, New York, 1925, p. 148.
7
Bracket!, The Negro Maryland
in . . .
, pp. 38 f.
8
Johnson, A Social History of the Sea Islands, p. 127.
9
Ibid., p. 131.
10
Johnson, Ante-Bellum North Carolina, p. 526.
11
Ibid., p. 469.
12
American Negro Slavery, p. 75.
18
Ibid., pp. 83 f.
14
Ibid., pp. 232 f.
15
Ibid., p. 84.
18
Ibid., pp. 95 f.
17
A Second Visit to the United States of North America, New York, 1849,
Vol. pp. 268 f.
I,
18
C. S. Johnson, Shadow of the Plantation, p. 8.
19
"Plantations with Slave Labor and Free," American Historical Review, 30:
743 1924-1925.
f.,
20
Herskovits, Life in a Haitian Valley, pp. 39 f. ;
translated from Pierre de
Vassiere, Saint-Domingue (1629-1789), la societe et la vie Creole sous I'ancien
regime, Paris, 1909, pp. 280 f.
21
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, pp. 10 f.
22
M. J. Herskovits, The American Negro, A Study in Racial Crossing, New
York, 1928, and "Social Selection and the Formation of Human Types," Human
Biology, 1 1250-262, 1929.
23
Herskovits, op. cit. ; see also Dollard, Caste and Class in a Southern Town,
p. 70.
24
Olmsted's commentary is germane here "In the French, Dutch, Danish, Ger- :
man, Spanish, and Portuguese colonies, the white fathers of colored children have
always been accustomed to educate and emancipate them and endow them with
property. In Virginia, and the English colonies generally, the white fathers of
mulatto children have always been accustomed to use them in a way that most
completely destroys the oft complacently-asserted claim, that the Anglo-Saxon race
is possessed of deeper natural affection than the more demonstrative sort of man-
kind." A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States, New York, 1856, p. 232. For data
indicating the relative numbers of mulattoes among the free Negroes of pre-Civil
War times see E. F. Frazier, The Free Negro Family, a Study of Family Origins
before the Civil War, Nashville, 1932, pp. 12 f., and "Traditions and Patterns of
3"
REFERENCES 313
Negro Family Life in the United States," in: E. B. Reuter, Race and Culture
Contacts, New York, 1934, pp. 204 ff.
25
American Negro Slavery, p. 75.
26
Ibid., p. 291.
27
A Second North America, Vol. I, p. 263.
Visit to the United States of
28 Memorials Southern Planter, Baltimore, 1887, p. 192.
of a
29
Frederick Douglass, My Bondage and My Freedom, New York and Auburn,
1855, P- 59-
30
Johnson, Ante-Belliim North Carolina, p. 83.
81
Bremcr, The Homes Neiv World, Vol. II, p. 449.
of the
32 The West Indies as They Are; or a Real Picture
R. Bickell, of Slavery . . .
89
The procedures in the way of obtaining a foothold for African
effect of such
cooking traditions in the South has, incidentally, been consistently overlooked;
yet it is not unlikely that the slaves exerted an appreciable influence in shaping
the cuisine regarded at present as characterizing various regions of the South.
Johnson, A Social History of the Sea Islands .... p. 130.
40
41
Cf. F. G. Speck, "The Negroes and the Creek Nation," Southern Workman,
37:106-110, 1908, and K. W. Porter, "Relations between Negroes and Indians
within the Present Limits of the United States," Journal of Negro History, ij :
287-367, 1932
42
Reuter, The Mulatto in the United States, Boston, 1918, pp. 378 f.
43
E. F. Frazier, "The Negro Slave Family," Journal of Negro History, 15:215,
1930. The quotation is from R. E. Park, "The Conflict and Fusion of Cul-
tures . . ." loc. cit., p. 119.
44
Frazier, op. cit p. 258. ,
45
Puckett, Polk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 10.
46
Ibid., p. 284; see also the explanation given by this author on p. 167 for the
retention of beliefs in magic, or on p. 31 for folk tales.
CHAPTER VI
1
D. Young, American Minority Peoples, New York, 1932, and "Research
Cf.
Memorandum on Minority Peoples in the Depression," Bull. 31, Soc. Sci. Research
Council, New York, 1937, for the setting of the Negro in the larger minority
group situation in this country.
2
W. R. Bascom, "Acculturation among the Gullah Negroes," Amer. Anth., 43 :
43-50, 1941.
3
Herskovits, Dahomey, Vol. I, pp. 32 f., Plate 3, and Life in a Haitian Valley,
p. 254, plate opposite p. 100.
4
Botume, First Days amongst the Contrabands, p. 53.
5
Caroline Couper Lovell, The Golden Isles of Georgia, Boston, 1932, pp. 187 f.
6
The former collected by W. R. Bascom the latter by M. J. Herskovits.
;
7
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 27.
8
Folk-Lore of the Sea Islands, South Carolina, Cambridge, 1923, p. 204.
9
Mary A. Owen, Old Rabbit the Voodoo and Other Sorcerers, London, 1893,
pp. 10 f.
10
Doyle, The Etiquette of Race Relations in the South, p. 76, quoting William
Ferguson, America by River and Rail, London, 1856, p. 149.
11
M. J. and F. S. Herskovits, Suriname Folk-Lore, pp. 4 ff.
12
First Days amongst the Contrabands, p. 59.
18
The Etiquette of Race Relations in the South, p. 76.
14
My Bondage and
15
My
Freedom, pp. 69 f.
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 393.
16
Ibid., p. 23.
17
Ibid., p. 394.
18
For illustrations of this and other instances of how elaborate the rules of
etiquette can be in a Negro tribe, see M. J. and F. S. Herskovits, Rebel Destiny,
various passages indicated under "Etiquette" in the index.
19
Caste and Class in a Southern Town, p. 6.
20
The Etiquette of Race Relations in the South, p. 161.
21
Ibid., pp. 79 f. The from Olmsted, The Cotton
first illustration is given as
Kingdom: Observations on Cotton and Slavery in the American
a Traveler's
Southern States, New York, 1861, Vol. II, pp. I f the second from Douglass, My .
;
Hopkins Univ. Stud, in Hist, and Pol. Sci., nth Ser., September-October, 1893.
M Aitnes, ibid., p. 16 ; Steiner, ibid. f p. 78.
REFERENCES 315
29 see also Aimes, op. 16.
Steiner, op. cit., pp. 78 f. ; cit., p.
80
Ibid., p. 19.
81
Paul Lewinson, Race, Class, and Party; a History of Negro Suffrage and
White Politics in the South, New York, 1932, passim.
32
Cf. among others Forde, "Land and Labour in a Cross River Village" Rene ;
"Ibid., p. 326.
"Ibid., pp. 461 f.
66
Shadow of the Plantation, pp. 29, 32 f., 39 f.
87
Ibid., p. 37-
88
After Freedom, pp. 146 f.
69
The Negro Family in the United States, p. 153.
90 I
bid., p. 158.
61
After Freedom, p. 147.
62
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 23.
88
Tradition and Patterns of Negro Family Life in the United States," loc. c\t..
p. 198.
64
Shadow of the Plantation, p. 29.
65
The Negro Family in the United States, pp. 57 f.
" Ibid., p. 55-
67
"The Negro Slave Family," loc. cit,, p. 234.
68
Ibid.
69
Shadow of the Plantation, pp. 48 f.
T0
Powdermaker, After Freedom, p. 146.
71
Ibid., p. 127.
T1
M. J. Herskovits, V. K. Cameron, and Harriet Smith, "The Physical Form
316 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
D. Bergen, "Animal and Plant Lore," Mem. Amer. Folk-Lore Society, Vol. VII,
1899, p. 84.
7R
Frazier, op. cit., p. 259.
79
Johnson, Shadow of the Plantation, pp. 57 f.
80
Ibid., pp. 64 f.
81
Ibid., p. 71.
82
Powdcrmaker, After Freedom, pp. 201 ff.
83 V. K. Cameron, "Folk
The most complete collection of data of this sort is in
Beliefs Pertaining to Health of the Southern Negro," unpublished Master's
Thesis, Northwestern University, 1930, pp. 18 ff.
8
*The fullest materials on these points are to be found in Parsons, "Folk-Lore
of the Sea Islands, South Carolina," passim; and Puckett, Folk Beliefs of the
Southern Negro, pp. 332 ff.
85
Cf. Herskovits, Dahomey, Vol. I, pp. 262 f., 270 ff., for instances of this.
80
"Record of Negro Folk-Lore," Journal of American Folk-Lore, 19:76!., 1906.
87
Loc. cit., as from M. N. Work, "Some Geechee Folk-Lore," Southern Work-
man, 35 1633-635, 1905.
88
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 100.
89
Op. cit., p. 107.
90
"Braziel Robinson Possessed of Two Spirits," Journal of American Folk-
Lore, 13:226-228, 1900.
91
Op. cit., pp. 335 f.
92
Folk-Lore of the Sea Islands, South Carolina, p. 198.
93
cit., pp. 334 f.
Op.
9*
Rattray, Religion and Art in Ashanti, pp. 51 ff. and Herskovits, Dahomey, ;
Vol. I, pp. 259 ff. For lists of Dahomean names of this sort, see Herskovits, espe-
cially pp.263 ff.
95
Turner's materials are not as yet available in published form for a prelim- ;
inary report on Puckett's elaborate project in the study of Negro names and their
derivation see his paper "Names of American Negro Slaves," in: G. P. Murdock,
Studies in the Science of Society Presented to Albert Galloway Keller, New
Haven, 1937, pp. 471-494-
90
Ibid., pp. 474 f. ; the references are to J. C. Cobb, Mississippi Scenes, Phila-
delphia, 1815, p 173, and to Carter G. Woodson, Free Negro Heads of Families
in the United States in 1830, Washington, 1925.
97
Puckett, op. cit., p. 475.
98
Personal communication.
99
Given in his mimeographed report.
100
pjrst Days amongst the Contrabands, pp. 48 f.
101
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, pp. 340 ff.
102
Ibid., p. 340.
103
Folk-Lore of the Sea Islands, South Carolina, p. 199 the importance of the ;
crossroads, like the calling of the child's soul, comes directly from Africa, despite
the footnoted comment by the author on the resemblance of the calling practice
having been observed among the Zuiii Indians, "who have taken it, no doubt, from
their Mexican neighbors."
104
M. J. and F. S. Herskovits, Suriname Folk-Lore, pp. 49 ff.
105
Folk Beliefs Pertaining to Health of the Southern Negro, p. 50.
106
Op. cit., p. 199.
107
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 347.
REFERENCES 317
JOB
Powdermaker, After Freedom, p. 208.
109
Ibid., pp. 208 f.
110
Frazier, The Negro Family in the United States, pp. 255 f. ; see also a
passage pp. 495 f.
111
M.
J. and F. S. Herskovits, Rebel Destiny, chap. I.
112
Beckwith, Black Roadways, a Study in Jamaican Folk Life, pp. 71 ff. Ramos, ;
Negro Brasileiro, pp. 140 ff. Herskovits, Life in a Haitian Valley, pp. 205 ff.
;
113
Social and Mental Traits of the American Negro, pp. 133 f.
114
After Freedom, p. 122.
115
Ibid., p. 133.
116
Shadow cf also Puckett, Folk Beliefs of the South-
of the Plantation, p. 183 ;
.
Rattray, Religion and Art in Ashanti, p. 178, which indicates that this custom was
also known in the Gold Coast.
118
Frazier, "The Negro Slave Family," he. cit., p. 216. The citation is from
William E. Hatcher, John Jasper, The Unmatched Negro Philosopher and Preacher,
New York, 1908, pp. 36 ff.
119
Frazier, op. cit.; this quotation is from Bishop L. J. Coppin, Unwritten His-
tory, Philadelphia, 1919, p. 55.
120
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, pp. 93 f.
121
For an account of an African rite performed in connection with sending the
soul of a dead infant back to Africa during the days of slavery, see Ball, Slavery
in the United States, pp. 264 f. this may be compared with the
; procedure among
the Guiana Negroes in returning an African spirit to its home as reported in M. J.
and F. S. Herskovits, Suriname Folk-Lore, p. 86.
122
Johnson has described the funeral of a man belonging to the group studied
by him (Shadoiv of the Plantation, pp. 162 ff.), and Powdermaker has given a less
complete account of a "middle-class" funeral (After Freedom, pp. 249 ff.). Neither
of these students, however, "carries through" his description by describing pre-
mortuary and immediate postmortuary and postfuneral rites outside the church.
123
Puckett, Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 90.
124
Ibid., p. 92.
125
Ibid., pp. 92 f.
120
Ibid., p. 88.
127
Folk-Lore of the Sea Islands, South Carolina, p. 215.
128
Herskovits, Dahomey, Vol. II, pp. 195 ff.
129
Herskovits, Life in a Haitian Valley, pp. 213 f.
130
Shadow of the Plantation, p. 165.
131
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 80.
132
Shadoiv of the Plantation, p. 22.
133
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 85.
134
M. J. and F. S. Herskovits, Rebel Destiny, p. 18.
135
Folk-Lore of the Sea Islands, South Carolina, p. 213.
130
Op. cit., p. 99; for a parallel to the rite given in the last sentence cf. Hers-
kovits, Dahomey, Vol. I, pp. 374 f., where an account is given of the manner in
which the young men run with the corpse through the village.
187
Puckett, op. cit., p. 82.
188
Ibid., p. 87.
139
Ibid., p. 84.
Ibid., p. 128.
141
Ibid., pp. 107 ff., passim; Zora Hurston, Mules and Men, Philadelphia, 1935,
PP^ 283 ff.
142
Puckett, op. cit. t pp. 102 ff.
144
Ibid., pp. 104 f. ; Parsons, Folk-Lore of the Sea Islands, South Carolina, pp.
213 f.
CHAPTER VII
1
Bertram W. Doyle, "Racial Traits of the Negro as Negroes Assign Them to
Themselves," unpublished Master's Thesis, University of Chicago, 1924, p. 90,
citing W. J. Gaines, The Negro and the White Man, Philadelphia, 1910, p. 185.
2
Caste and Class in a Southern Town, pp. 224 f.
8
L. P. Jackson, "Religious Development of the Negro in Virginia from 1760 to
1860," Journal of Negro History, 16:198, 1931.
4
Ibid., p. 170.
5
Ibid., p. 211 (footnote 115).
6
Ibid., p. 198.
T
Ibid., p. 199.
8
Doyle, Etiquette of Race Relations, p. 45, quoting Mary Roykin Chestnut, A
Diary from Dixie, New York, 1905, p. 354.
9
Shadoiv of the Plantation, pp. 151 f.
10
The Religious Instruction of the Negroes, pp. 49 ff., passim.
11
Op. cit., in numerous passages, e.g., pp. 232 f.
12
Op. cit., pp. 125 f.
18
John B. Cade, "Out of the Mouths of Ex-Slaves," Journal of Negro History f
20:331, 1935.
14
Powdermaker, After Freedom, p. 270 ; Frazier, The Negro Family in the
United States, pp. 30 f. Doyle, op. ;
cit. t pp. 43 f.
15
Doyle, op. cit., p. 32.
16
Op. cit., pp. 223, 239.
17
Raymond Jones, "A Comparative Study of Religious Cult Behavior Among
J.
Negroes with Special Reference to Emotional Group Conditioning Factors,"
Howard University Studies in the Social Sciences, Vol. II, no. 2, Washington,
1939, P. 2 ff.
18
the "Classified Table of Religious Cults in the United States" given
Ibid., p. 5 ;
22
Social and Mental Traits of the Negro, pp. 74 f., 83 ff.
28
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, pp. 532 ff.
24
Caste and Class in a Southern Town, pp. 344 ff.
28
After Freedom, pp. 232 ff.
28
W. E. Barton, Old Plantation Hymns, Boston, 1899, pp. 41-42.
27
Shadow of the Plantation, pp. 159 f.
28
M. J. and F. S. Herskovits, Rebel Destiny, pp. 228 ff. 307 ff ; .
318
REFERENCES 319
*
See
p. notes 27 and 30.
1 6 f.,
81
M. J. Herskovits, "African Gods and Catholic Saints in New World Negro
Belief," Amer. Anth., 39 1635-647, 1937. The point is made the more striking by the
recent discovery that the identical mechanism is operative among the Moham-
medanized tribes of West Africa itself, where the /inn are identified with the pagan
ifka by the Hausa. Cf. J. H. Greenberg, The Religion of a Sudanese Culture as
Influenced by Islam, unpublished Doctor's Thesis, Northwestern University, 1940,
and idem., "Some Aspects of Negro-Mohammedan Culture-Contact among the
Hausa," Amer. Anth., 43:51-61, 1941.
32
O Negro Brasileiro, Figs. 26, 27, 31, 32.
88
This work was carried out in accordance with the systematic program
field
of study of New World Negro cultures described on pp. 6 ff., 15 ff.
34
Cf., for example, his Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, pp. 27 ff., 114, 532,
548 ff., 567, and 574, for some very cogent references to African aspects of Negro
religion.
85
Ibid., pp. 545 f
88
Op. cit., p. 56.
87
See pp. 12-14.
88
Jones, op. cit., pp. 45 f.
89
E.g., Johnson, Shadow of the Plantation, p. 151.
40
Jones, op. cit., p. 49.
41
After Freedom, p. 232.
42
Ibid., pp. 259 f.
43
/tod., p. 273.
44
F. M. Davenport, Primitive Traits in Religious Revivals, New York, 1905,
pp. 94, 125 f., 133, and 142.
45
Cf. James Mooney, "The Ghost-Dance Religion with a Sketch of the Sioux
Outbreak of 1890," I4th Ann. Rep., Bureau of Amer. Ethnology, Part II, Wash-
ington, 1897 Leslie Spier, "The Prophet Dance of the Northwest and Its Deriva-
I
tives the Source of the Ghost Dance," Gen. Ser. in Anthropology, No. I, Menasha
:
(Wis.), 1935-
46
Davenport, op. cit., p. 73.
47
Ibid., p. 77.
48
Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, pp. 539 f.
49
"Religious Folk-Beliefs of Whites and Negroes," Journal of Nefyro History,
i6:9-3S, 1931.
60
Op. cit., p. 92.
51
"Religious Folk-Beliefs of Whites and Negroes," loc. cit., pp. 26 f.
52
Ibid., pp. 20 f.
68
Cf. the description in Dollard, Caste and Class in a Southern Town, p. 236.
54
James Mooney, "The Cherokee River Cult," Journal of American Folk-Lore,
13:1 ff., IQOO.
" Op. cit., p. 262.
88
Ibid.
57
See p. 18.
68
Folk-Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 219, from G. W. Cable, The Grandis-
simes, New York, 1898.
69
Ibid. (Puckett), p. 221 ibid. (Cable), pp. 91 f-
;
60
Green Thursday, New York, p. 28.
61
Herskovits, Dahomey, Vol. I, p. 35.
62
Puckett, Folk-Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 421.
n lbid., pp. 257, 319, 381, 424.
64
Ibid., p. 553.
65 Health of the Southern Negro, p. 37.
Folk Beliefs Pertaining to
66 in South Carolina," Journal of American
Henry C. Davis, "Negro Folklore
Folk-Lore, 37:245, 1914; Puckett, op. cit. f p. 290.
32O THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
67
Puckett, op. cit., p. 399.
"
68
B. A. Botkin, 'Folk-Say' and Folk-Lore," in W. T. Couch, Culture in the
South, Chapel Hill, 1934, p. 590.
09
Folk-Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 311.
70
Folk Beliefs Pertaining to Health of the Southern Negro, pp. 36 f.
71
Ibid., pp. 40 ff .
72
Ibid., pp. 46 f.
78
Judicial C?ses Concerning American Slavery and the Negro, Vol. II, pp. 520 f.
74
75
My Bondage and My Freedom, pp. 238 f.
Herskovits, Dahomey, Vol. II, pp. 256 ff.
76
Folk-Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 287.
77
Ibid., p. 296; the quotation is from A. M. Bacon, "Conjuring and Conjure-
Doctors," Southern Workman, 24:211, 1895, and the footnoted references state that
"this paper gives several illustrative cases."
78
Herskovits, Dahomey, Vol. II, pp. 285 ff.
79
Folk-Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 229; citing Mary A. Owen, "Among
the Voodoos," Proc. of the Int. Folk-Lore Congress, 1891, pp. 232 ff.
80
Herskovits, op. cit., Vol. II, pp. 263 ff.
81
Old Rabbit the Voodoo and Other Sorcerers, London, 1893.
82
Mules and Men, Philadelphia, 1935.
83
E.g., Louis Pendleton, "Negro Folk-Lore and Witchcraft in the South,"
Journal of American Folk-Lore, 3:201-207, 1890; (Miss) Herron and A. M.
Bacon, "Conjuring and Conjure-Doctors in the Southern United States," ibid. 9: t
knowledge of the region and with such other works dealing with New Orleans as
are available indicate that the paragraph reproduced here, and the entire section of
which it is a part, are factually valid. It is worth noting that Joao do Rio (Paulo
Barreto), writing at the turn of the century, noted the identification by the Negroes
in Rio dc Janeiro of S. Antonio (Saint Anthony) with Verequete. As Religioes no
Rio, Paris and Rio de Janeiro, n.d., p. 16.
109
Ibid., pp. 195, 362, 563 ft.
110
pp. 562 f. ; the reference is to M. A. Owen,
Ibid., "Among the Voodoos,"
Proc. of the Int. Folk-Lore Congress, 1891, pp. 232 f.
111
After Freedom, p. 290.
112
196 f.
O/>. ft/., pp.
113
Puckett, Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro, p. 548 the quotation is from
;
"Race Problems of the South," Report of the Proceedings of the First Annual Con-
ference of the Southern Society for the Promotion of the Study of Race Conditions
and Problems in the South, Montgomery, Ala., 1900, p. 143.
114
Barton, Old Plantation Hymns, p. 1 1.
115
Mules and Men, p. 306.
110
Herskovits, Dahomey, Vol. II, p. 223.
117
Louis Pendleton, "Negro Folk-Lorc and Witchcraft in the South," loc .
ft/.,
pp. 201
m M. f.
from Southern Nigeria, London, 1910, pp. n ff., and R. H. Milligan, The Fetish
Folk of West Africa, London, 1912, p. 240; and from G. E. Ellis, Negro Culture in
West Africa, New York, 1914, p. 63.
184
Religion and Art in Ashanti, pp. 29 f.
CHAPTER VIII
1
This section gives in essence the findings of a report written for the Committee
on Research in Comparative Musicology, American Council of Learned Societies.
2
Cf. W. F. Allen, C
P. Ware, and Lucy Garrison, Slave Songs of the United
States, New York, 1868 (reprinted, 1929).
Afro-American Folksongs, New York, 1914.
3
4
"American Negro Songs," Int. Rev. of Missions, 15748-753, 1926.
6
Ibid.
6
American Negro Folk-Songs, Cambridge, 1928.
7
"The Genesis of the Negro Spiritual," American Mercury, 26:243-248, 1932;
White Spirituals of the Southern Uplands, Chapel Hill, 1933; Spiritual Folk-
Songs of Early America, New York, 1937.
8
Folk Culture on St. Helena Island, Chapel Hill, 1930; "The Negro Spiritual,
a Problem in Anthropology," American Anthropologist, 33:151-171, 1931; "Negro
Folk Songs in the South," in W. T. Couch, Culture in the South, Chapel Hilt,
:
Jamaica the melodies transcribed by Helen H. Roberts, "A Study of Folk Song
Variants Based on Field Work in Jamaica," Journal of American Folk-Lore, 38:
149-216, 1925, and "Possible Survivals of African Songs in Jamaica," Musical
Quarterly, n :34-358, 1926, among other titles by this student. A contribution by
Fernando Ortiz on Cuban Negro Music, especially drum rhythms ("La Musica
Sagrada de los Negros Yoruba en Cuba," Estudios Afro-Cubanos, 2:89-104, 1938)
will be found of great value. Musicological analyses and transcriptions of songs
from Dutch Guiana by Dr. M. Kolinski will be found in M. J. and F. S. Herskovits,
Suriname Folk-Lore, New York, 1936, pp. 491 ff.
14
Some Negro melodies are to be found in the work by Mme. Elsie Houston-
Peret, Chants populaires du Bresil, Paris, 1930.
15
Attention may be called to the new Argentinian musical review Pauta, the
first number of which includes a paper entitled "Folklore de la Costa Zamba;
la Marinera," pp.by the Peruvian student of Negro life, Fernando Romero.
5, 32,
18
A H. Varley, "African Native Music, an Annotated
publication by Douglas
Bibliography," Royal Empire Society Bibliographies, No. 8, London, 1936, will
be found as useful for its New World entries (pp. 86 ff.), as for its African
citations.
17
An approach such as that suggested by M. Metfessel (in his Phonophotography
in Folk Music, Chapel Hill, 1928) may be of help in studying problems of this
order.
322
REFERENCES 323
18 See pp. 15-18.
19
M. J. and F. S. Herskovits, Suriname Folk-Lore, loc. cit.
20
recordings, subsequently made in Haiti by Allan Lomax in 1936
Electrical
for the Library of Congress and by Harold Courlander in 1939 for the Department
of Anthropology of Columbia University, should be noted.
21
Those drawn on were R. N. Dett (ed.), Religious Folk-Songs of the Negro as
Sung at Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va., 1927 N. Baltanta, Saint Helena Island
;
(reprint of 1929).
22
M. Griaule, "Masques Dogons," Tr. et Mem. de I'lnst. d'Ethnologie, Vol.
XXXIII, Paris, 1938, pp. 716 ff.
23
Ibid., Fig. 251, p. 736, especially column four, figures three from top to end,
and the foot movements noted by the small arrows.
24
Carried out with the support of a Fellowship grant of the Rosenwald Fund,
under the sponsorship of the Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University.
25
"The Dance in Place Congo," Century Magazine, 31:517-532, 1885-1886.
26
Mules and Men, pp. 299 ff.
27
Fabulous New Orleans, passim.
28
The appropriate titles will be found in the Bibliography to M. J. and F. S.
Herskovits, Suriname Folk-Lore, pp. 762 ff. Since this volume has appeared, cer-
tain other collections have been published E. C. Parsons, "Folk-Lore of the
:
Antilles, French and English," Mem. American Folk-Lore Society, Vol. XXVI,
Pt. 2, New York, 1936; Suzanne Comhaire-Sylvain, "Creole Tales from Haiti,"
82
Ibid., pp. 326 ff.
83
Ib id., pp. 324 f.
84
Ibid., pp. 151 ff., passim.
35
Mutes and Men, pp. 25 ff.
36
I bid., pp. i66f.
87
For the Togoland version, see Jakob Spieth, Die Ewe-Stomme, Berlin, 1906,
P- 557-
88
Stoney and Shelby, Black Genesis.
39
Personal communication.
40
Lorenzo D. Turner, West African Survivals in the Vocabulary of Gullah, pre-
sented before the Modern Language Association, New York meeting, December,
1938.
41
The marks words indicate their tonal registers, (~) being high tone,
after these African
(_) low tone, a glide of high to low. The system is an adaptation of that worked out
( "^ )
by Miss Ida Ward in her Introduction to the Ibo Language (Cambridge, 1936) and her work,
The Phonetic and Tonal Structure of Efik (Cambridge, 1933). The chief advantage of this
system is its freedom from the diacritical marks that otherwise must be used to denote
the all-important element of significant tone in African words.
42
These citations are from a paper, Some Problems Involved in the Study of
the Negroes in the New World with Special Reference to African Survivals, de-
324 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
Example 'I will do' by I go do/ . . . The above remarks though probably ap-
plicable to other African languages, have been written with speech reference to
Hausa."
47
We take our examples from Martha Beckwith, "Jamaica Anansi Stories"
(Mem. American Folk-Lore XVII, New York, 1924), and the page
Society, Vol.
numbers in parenthesis after each quoted phrase refer to this work. In this, as
in the lists that follow, only the first occurrence of a given idiom is referred to,
though all those we cite are quite common. Following the example, we give the
corresponding taki-taki equivalent.
48 "Folk-Tales
of Andros Island, Bahamas," Mem. American Folk-Lore Society,
Vol. XVIII, New York, 1918.
49
"Folk-Lore of the Sea Islands, South Carolina," ibid., Vol. XVI, New York,
1923.
50 "
The
footnoted explanation of "too" as "a characteristic use for 'very* exactly
corresponds to the way Suriname Negroes employ tumusi.
51
Note the use of the word "meat" with the meaning of "live animal."
52
Once again the use of "one" for "alone" is to be remarked.
68
Tribute must be paid to the insight with which Hugo Schuchardt ("Die
Sprache der Saramakkaneger in Surinam," Vcrh. dcr K. Akad. van Wctcnschap-
pen te Amsterdam, Ajd. Letterkunde [n.s.], Vol. XIV, No. 6, 1914, pp. ix-xiv),
discerned the resemblances between the speech of various groups of Negroes in the
New World and taki-taki, on the basis of a vastly smaller amount of data than
is available today.
54
Ward (Cunnie Rabbit, Mr. Spider and
There are the tales of Cronise and
the Other Beef: West African Folk Tales, New York, 1903), and it is worthy of
remark that several students of New World Negro dialect have noticed correspond-
ences between the speech recorded in these tales and that of the Negroes which
those students have investigated. The paper by Merrick is perhaps the only study
extant of West African
pidgin as such.
55
M. J. Herskovits, "Tales in Pidgin English from Nigeria," Journal
and F. S.
*-
In transcribing Twi, the same phonetic system employed for laki-taki has been used
except that an apostrophe here stands for a glottal stop, and that tonal marks (a = high,
a = middle, a = low, & = middle to low, & = middle to high, a = high to low) are
employed.
63
Folk Lore of the Sea Islands, South Carolina, p. xx. On p. xvii, n. 5, similarities in
idiom between the Sea Island speech and that of Sierra Leone, as recorded by Cronisc
and Ward, are cited.
4
D. Westermann, A Study of the Ewe Language, London, 1930, p. 50. The examples
cited for Ewe
apply in the case of F^, the related language of Dahomey, as can be
also
seen by referring to Maurice Dclafosse, Manuel Dahomccn, Paris, 1894, passim.
66
M. B. Wilkie, Ga Grammar, Notes, and Exercises, London, 1930, p. 30.
67
W. T. Balmer and F. C. F. Grant, A Grammar of the Fanti-Akan Language,
London, 1921, p. 24.
68
Abbe Pierre Bouche, Conies Nagos, Melusine, Vol. II, 1884-1885, cols. 129-130.
Other Yoruba examples may be found in J. A. de Gaye and W. S. Beecroft,
Yoruba Grammar (2nd ed.), London, 1923, passim.
69
Westermann, op. cit., p. 43.
70
Wilkie, op. cit., p. 7.
71
Balmer and Grant, op. cit., pp. 62 fT.
72
S. Johnson, The History of the Yorubas, from the Earliest Times to the Be-
ginning of the Protectorate, London, 1921, p. xxxvi Gaye and Beecroft, op. cit.t
;
p. 8.
73
Westermann, op. cit., pp. 52 ff.
74
Wilkie, op. cit., p. 29.
75
Balmer and Grant, op. cit., chap xi.
78
Thus Philip V. King ("Some Hausa Idioms," Journal African Society, Vol.
VIII, 1908, p. 196) states of Hausa, "The absence of any proper comparative is
one of the weakest spots in the language. The English 'too many,' . . . 'too good/
etc.,can only be rendered by the use of the verb fi 'to pass or excell' . . . 'He is
cleverer than you' Ya fika nankali (lit., 'He surpasses you as to sense'). . . ."
7
7 Westermann, op. cit., p. no.
78
Ibid., p. 119.
lbid., pp. I26f.
80
Ibid., p. 129.
81
Cf., for example, Balmer and Grant, op. cit., p. 14, sections 12 and 13, for their
remarks on the "glide" in Fanti.
82
M. J. Herskovits, "What Has Africa Given America?" The New Republic,
84:92-94, 1935-
83
Personal communication.
84
G. B. Johnson, Folk Culture on St. Helena Island, South Carolina; and C.
Brooks, The Relation of the Alabama-Georgia Dialect to the Provincial Dialects
of Great Britain.
85
Jules Faine, Philologie crcole, Port-au-Prince, 1936.
Appendix
Once the force of the myth of the Negro past is recognized, and the
limitations of analyses made in terms of its sanctions understood, new
directives in investigation become apparent, and detailed reconsidera-
tion of the published sources comes to yield new values when employed
as part of a broad historical, ethnological, and geographical attack. That
the work done in accordance with this newer approach has merely
tapped the surface of the rich store of data that awaits future study has
been emphasized again and again in these pages and is pointed by the
fact that so many important and numerous Negro communities, both
in Africa and the New World, are not known at all, or that no rounded
lem. The study of physical types of the New World extends our knowl-
edge of race-crossing and the reaction of the human physique to a new
environment at the same time that it gives added information as to the
changes in physical type of the Negroes in a new habitat and under
contact with persons of different race. Research into linguistic prob-
lems, or a study of dancing in a given area, or investigation into reli-
gious behavior similarly documents the study of Negro acculturation,
and through this of acculturative processes in general, while adding to
the materials available for the study of language as a whole, or of danc-
ing, or of comparative religion.
In outlining a series of projects to be studied, therefore, the broadest
possible attack, as to both geographical spread and interdisciplinary
326
DIRECTIVES FOR FURTHER STUDY 327
2.
Mandingo
b. Sierra Leone. The extent to which Sierra Leone was a source of
slaves a matter of dispute. That slavers called at this colony to re-
is
plenish stocks of food and water is well known, and during the latter
period of the trade substantial purchases of human beings were made
from the region. Two groups in this area should therefore be studied
in detail, so as to put on record the patterns prevalent in the region :
1. Temne
2. Mende
c. Liberia. The "Grain Coast" of the earlier writers, this area is like-
wise not thought to have contributed to any great extent to the peopling
of Negro America. The coastal region was inhabited by tribes whose
hostilitytoward the slavers prevented effective raids on their popula-
tions. Two
studies are needed for this area, to be made among the folk
most often referred to. This will assure a continuous distribution of
materials and check possible New World retentions which otherwise
might be overlooked :
1. Vai
2. Kru
d. Ivory Coast. The western part of this territory, like Liberia, con-
tributed littleto the slave population, but as we move eastward and
approach the Gold Coast, operations of the slavers were greater. Care-
ful study should who are of Ashanti stock, but
be made of the Agni,
whose development in recent years, especially in terms of relative dis-
turbance of earlier custom, has been different in this French colony from
that of the related Ashanti because of the fortuitous circumstance of
drawing boundary lines in the course of the partition of Africa. One
of the other smaller units, more characteristic of Ivory Coast ethnic
differentiation, should also be given attention, as a check study, prefer-
ably where some prior materials can be employed as a foundation :
1. Agni
2. Guro (or Gagu)
e. The Sudan. Passing for the moment to the interior tribes of West
1. Fula
2. Mossi
3. Bornu
f. Gold Coast. A
foundation of fact concerning the Ashanti,
solid
is to be had in the volumes of R. S.
the outstanding people of this area,
Rattray, to which reference has been made many times in these pages.
However, systematic information is lacking regarding the coastal peo-
ples, who, though related in their culture to the inland Ashanti, exhibit
local differences which richly merit investigation, especially in view of
the leading role played by this area in the slave trade:
1. Fanti
2. Gq.
I. Popo
Nigeria. The results of research by Bascom in Ife and by Harris
h.
from this area. One tribal study would, however, provide this if Avail-
able to supplement the data already gathered :
i. Yaunde
j.
French Equatorial Africa (Gaboon) (Loango). The importance
of this region, as a part of the Congo basin, is considerable, and one
study should be made here to give a rounded intensive portrayal of a
tribe typical of the region:
i. Fang
k. Belgian Congo. A
good lead for the studies so badly needed from
this area is given in theworks of Rinchon, where tribal designations of
certain slaves are mentioned. In view of the importance of the Congo
Negroes in the New World, and especially because so slight a number
of discernible traits seem to have been left by them in New World
Negro cultures where many survivals of the customs of other tribes
are to be found, particular attention should be given this region, both
coastal and interior. A
somewhat extensive series of studies is there-
fore indicated:
1. Mayombe
2. Bakongo
3. Bambala
4. Bamfumungu
5. Bapende
6. Bapoto (Mondonga)
I.
Angola. This area, today a Portuguese colony, was of special
importance as a source for Brazilian slaves, and is thus another region
from which it is imperative to have detailed information on at least one
or two tribal groups. Hambley's work on the Ovimbundu is available
for the central portion, and Estermann's papers for the southern, but
since, according to most accounts, slaves were principally obtained from
the northern reaches of the present colony, the most likely sources of
significant data would thus be tapped in studies of tribes living in that
area:
1. Bambanga
2. Balunda
again here, nor the substantial progress made by Brazilian scholars who
have studied the Negro cultures of that country. Their preoccupation with
religion and folklore, however, leaves work to be done in making avail-
able facts concerning other phases of the life of these people, and
hence further research is needed in the areas of principal Negro settle-
DIRECTIVES FOR FURTHER STUDY 331
ment. As envisaged, this research is to be devoted to obtaining rounded
descriptions that will supplement and provide a background of secular
practice for the full materials bearing on the religious life now at hand :
1. Pernambuco
2. Bahia
3. Rio de Janeiro
1. Tobago
2. St. Vincent
3. Barbadoes
4. Martinique
5. Dominica
6. Guadeloupe
7. Antigua
8. Nevis (St. Kitts)
d. The Greater Antilles. These great islands have large Negro popu-
lations, and their of especial importance since, except for
study is
Jamaica, here one finds the materials with which to check the effects of
Spanish as against French and English influence on Negro life in the
Caribbean. Jamaica, Cuba, and Haiti have been studied to varying
degrees, but of Negro life in Santo Domingo and Puerto Rico little is
known. Work in Cuba has been almost entirely concerned with religious
life, and especially the functioning of magic; in Jamaica, studies have
either dealt with folklore and folk customs of the general population,
or with the Maroons hence the rounded study of an ordinary Negro
;
i. Puerto Rico
332 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
2. Santo Domingo
3. Jamaica
4. Cuba
The Bahamas and Bermuda. These represent special cases, the
e.
first in isolation from whites and the second in contact with them.
problem of an optimum locality and the best groups with which to work
in the United States, no less than anywhere else, is a matter always best
determined by a field worker on the basis of his preliminary sampling
of a region or a community.
2. Virginia
(a) a rural community
(b) Richmond
3. Georgia
(a) a rural community
(b) Savannah
4. Mississippi (a rural community)
5. Alabama
(a) a rural community
(b) Birmingham
6. Louisiana
(a) New Orleans
(b) a community in the Delta country
Studies in the North:
Groups of contrasting socio-economic status in:
7. Philadelphia
8. Detroit
9. Cincinnati
1
10. St. Louis
Smaller communities:
11. Muncie, Indiana
12. Albany, New York
13. Springfield, Ohio
14. Springfield, Illinois
Negro physical type have not been given a great deal of attention in
these pages, except to indicate the manner in which a study of race-
crossing in the Negro population of the United States constituted the
catalyzing agent in bringing into being the research program under dis-
cussion here. The importance of studies in this field, however, for an
understanding of the reaction of physical types to new environmental
conditions and, even more, for a comprehension of the mechanisms of
racial crossing, is of the highest order and such materials will also con-
;
have to guide them are standard constants for growth and much diffi-
;
culty is experienced when dealing with Negro children who, it has been
observed, tend to differ from these white norms even where malnutrition
is ruled out as a possible contributory factor. Hence as a final project in
of the West Indies where children of unmixed Negro ancestry and known
age can be procured in adequate numbers, the following is indicated :
type that has already been found of such great value. Collections in
parts of France other than Nantes should be investigated, especially in
Marseilles in England, especially Hull and Liverpool and in Holland,
; ;
opinion on the part of revolters, immediate causes of the revolt, and atti-
prehended.
Each student should be able to compound experience by working in
a number of Negro cultures, so that he can perceive resemblances which
would be lost to the newcomer. From a purely practical point of view,
this is important if only because of the saving of time that results when
a student familiar with the major sanctions of one culture comes to
study another of similar background. Field-workers will, again, prefer-
ably build on materials at hand, for the projects indicated have been
340 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
sketched with the work already carried on in mind. Thus, if the Virgin
Islands or the Maroons of Jamaica or the peasants of Haiti have not
been mentioned as subjects for study, or if certain obvious tribes of
West Africa have not been specified, it is because previous research
completed, though in some cases as yet unpublished, may later be tell-
ingly drawn on. For planning must be predicated on recognition of the
principle .that, in a field as vast as this, duplication of work means
serious waste of time and effort. Furthermore, to utilize students who
have had prior experience, making it possible for them to continue work
already within the field of their competence and interest, with but the
reorientation needed to make possible the direct comparison of their
findings with those of others this, from the point of view of an
organization most efficient to obtain the desired results, is the optimum.
As these studies are completed, no matter where, they will provide
materials that will suggest further leads and make for further enlighten-
ment as to the cultural adventures of the Negro in his New World
habitat. That international complications should require abstention for
a time from studies in Africa is thus not of overwhelming importance.
For in the United States and in nonbelligerent Latin America, more
than enough communities are to be found which will require the atten-
tion of many workers over a considerable period of time. As for West
Africa, it is at least sufficiently known to permit a comparison with these
New World societies adequate enough to throw more light on the process
ofNew World Negro accommodation than is now to be had. And this,
in turn, will illuminate research in Africa itself whenever this can be
resumed.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1791.
ANON., "Record of Negro Folk-Lore." Jour. Amer. F oik-Lore, 19:
75-77, 1906.
ANON., "Vaudou." Grand Dictionnaire Universel du XIX s Siecle Fran-
gais, ed. Pierre Larousse, Vol. XV,
1866-1890, p. 812.
-
&PTHEKER, HERBERT, "American Negro Slave Revolts." Science and
- Society,
,
i :5i2-538, 1937.
The Negro in the Civil War. New York, 1938.
1939.
43-50,
"Acculturation among the Gullah Negroes,"
"
EOTKIN, BENJAMN A., 'Folk-Say' and Folk-Lore," in W. T. Couch
(ed.), Culture in the South, pp. 570-593. Chapel Hill, 1934.
(BOTUME, ELIZABETH HYDE, First Days Amongst the Contrabands. Bos-
ton, 1893.
BOUCHE, L'ABBE PIERRE, "Contes Nagos." Melusine, Vol. II, 1884-
1885.
BOUET-WILLAUMEZ, Louis ix)UARD, Commerce et Traite des Noirs
aux Cotes Occidentales d'Afrique. Paris, 1848.
BOWDICH, T. EDWARD, Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee.
London, 1819.
BRACKETT, JEFFREY R., The Negro in Maryland, a Study of the Institu-
tion of Slavery. Baltimore, 1889.
BREMER, FREDERIKA, The Homes of the New
World. New
York, 1868.
(2 vols.)
BRINTON, D. G., Races and Peoples. New York, 1890.
BROOKS, CLEANTH, JR., The Relation of the Alabama-Georgia Dialect to
the Provincial Dialects of Great Britain. Baton
Rouge, 1935.
BROWN, W. NORMAN, 'The Tar-Baby Story at Home." Scientific
Monthly, 15:228-234, 1922.
BROWNING, JAMES B., "The Beginnings of Insurance Enterprise among
Negroes." Jour, of Negro Hist., 22:417-432, 1937.
BRUCE, P. A., Economic History of Virginia in the Seventeenth Cen-
tury. New York, 1907. 2 vols.
BURTON, RICHARD F., "A Mission to Gelele, King of Dahome ." . .
-
CLEENE, N.
-
1935-
,
DE, "Les Chefs Indigenes au Mayombe." Africa, 8:63-75,
-
DAYRELL, E., Folk-Stories from Southern Nigeria. London, 1910.
DELAFOSSE, MAURICE, Manuel Dahomeen. Paris, 1894.
Haut Senegal-Niger (Soudan jrancais). Paris, 1912. (3 vols.)
,
-
J l
-, ,. c<f -
*
,
- Them to
Chicago, 1924.
Themselves." Unpublished Master's Thesis, University of
^,
. ,
.
ton, 1900.
-
Du Bois, E. B. (ed.), "Economic Cooperation among Negro Ameri-
cans." Atlanta University Publications, Vol. 12. Atlanta, 1907.
,
Black Folk, Then and Now. New York, 1939.
don, 1801.
'
._' . t k / v
<,
- 1887.
- ,
The Ewe-Speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast of West Africa.
London, 1890.
,The Yoruba-S'peaking Peoples of the Slave Coast of West
Africa. London, 1894.
ELLIS, G. E., Negro Culture in West Africa. New York, 1914.
EMBREE, E. R., Brown America, the Story of a New Race. New York,
ESPINOSA, AURELIO M., "Notes on the Origin and History of the Tar-
Baby Story." Jour. Amer. Folk-Lore, 43:129-209, 1930.
-
ESTERMANN, C., "La Tribu Kwangama en Face de la Civilisation
-
Europeenne." Africa, 7:431-443, 1934.
, "Les Forgerous Kwangama." Bull, de
Geographic, 44:109-116, 1936.
"Coutumes des Mbali du Sud d* Angola." Africa,
la Soc. Neuchdteloise de
, 12:74-86,
1939-
Estudos Afro-Brasileiros. Trabalhas apresentaclos ao i Congresso Afro-
Brasileiro reunido no Recife em 1934, i vol. Rio de Janeiro, 1935.
I937-
, Marriage Law Among the Tallensi. Accra (Gold Coast), 1937.
"Social and Psychological Aspects of Education in Taleland."
Supplement to Ajrica, Vol. XI, No. 4, 1938.
FORTES, M. and S. L., "Food in the Domestic Economy of the Tallerisi."
Africa, 9:237-276, 1936. ""^ '
^ '
FRAZIER, E. F., 'The Negro Slave Tamily." Jour. Negro Hist., 15:198-
,
The Free Negro Family, a Study of Family Origins before tfo
Civil War. Nashville, 1932. ,\,
HALL, JULIEN A., "Negro Conjuring and Tricking." Jour. Amcr. Folk-
Lore, 10:241-243, 1897.
HAMBLY, WILFRID D., "The Ovimbundu of Angola." Field Museum of
Natural History, Anthropological Scries, Publication 329, \2i :QO-
362. Chicago, 1934.
HARRIS, JOEL CHANDLER, Nights with Uncle Remits. Boston, 1911.
Uncle Remus Returns. Boston and New York, 1918.
,
1932.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 347
HERSKOVITS, MELVILLE J., "On the Provenience of New World Ne-
groes." Social Forces, 12:247-262, 1933.
,
"The Social History of the Negro," in: C. Murchison, Hand-
book of Social Psychology. Worcester (Mass.), 1935, pp. 207-267.
, "What Has Africa Given America?" The New Republic, 84:
92-94, 1935.
,
"The Significance of West Africa for Negro Research." Jour.
Negro Hist., 21 :i5-3O, 1936.
,
New World Negro Be-
"African Gods and Catholic Saints in
lief." Amer. Anth., 39^35~643 1937-
, "A Note on 'Woman Marriage' in Dahomey." Africa, 10:335-
34i, 1937;
, Life in a Haitian Valley. New York, 1937.
,
"The Significance of the Study of Acculturation for Anthro-
pology." Amer. Anth. f 39:259-264, 1937.
,Acculturation, The Study of Culture Contact. New York, 1938.
, Dahomey. New York, 1938. (2 vols.)
"The Ancestry of the American Negro." The American Scholar,
8:84-94, 1938-1939.
HERSKOVITS, M. J. and F. S., "Tales in Pidgin English from Nigeria."
Jour. Amer. Folk-Lore, 44:448-466, 1931.
,
"A Footnote to the History of Negro Slaving." Opportunity,
11:178-181, 1933.
,
Rebel Destiny, Among the Bush Negroes of Dutch Guiana.
New York, 1934.
'
\ (
,
Suriname Folk-Lore. New
York, 1937.
, "Tales in Pidgin English from Ashanti." Jour. Amer. Folk-
Lore, 50:52-101, 1937.
HERSKOVITS, M. J., CAMERON, VIVIAN K., andSMITH, HARRIET, "The
Physical Form of Mississippi Negroes." Amer. Jour. Phys. Anthr. t
16:193-201, 1931.
HERZOG, GEORGE, Research in Primitive and Folk Music in the United
States. Bulletin No. 24, 1936, American Council of Learned So-
cieties.
American Musicological Society paper (African Influence on
,
1930.
348 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
JOHNSON, GUY B., Folk Culture on St. Helena Island, South Carolina.
Chapel Hill, 1930.
-
^~, "The Negro Spiritual, a Problem in Anthropology." Amer.
:I
k 'Anth., 33 57-i7 r I93 1 >
-
JOHNSTON, SIR HARRY H., The Negro in the New World. London,
' '
1910. <
v>
MENCKEN, H. L., The American Language. New York, 1936 ed. 1'
ODUM, H. W., "Social and Mental Traits of the Negro." Col. Univ.
Studies in History, Econ. f and Public Law. New York, 1910.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 351
OLDENDORP, C. G. A., Geschichte des Missionen der Evangelischen
Bruder auf den inseln S. Thomas, S. Croix und S. Jan. Barby,
1777.
OLMSTED, FREDERICK L., A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States. New
York, 1863. '
, ,
,
The Cotton Kingdom: A Traveler's Observations on Cotton and
Slavery in the American Southern States. Vol. II, New York, 1862.
2ded.
A
Journey in the Back Country. New York, 1863.
,
-
PUCKETT, NEWBELL N., Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro. Chapel
-
Hill, 1926.
, "Religious Folk-Beliefs of Whites and Negroes." Jour. Negro
Hist., 16:9-35, 1931.
, "Names of American Negro Slaves," in: G. P. Murdock,
Studies in the Science of Society Presented to Albert Galloway
Keller, pp. 471-494. New Haven, 1937.
-
-
ZM Brazil. Washington, 1939. (Trans. Richard Pattee)
RATTRAY, R. S., Ashanti. Oxford, 1923.
-
REUTER, E. B., The Mulatto in the United States. Boston, 1918.
-
RINCHON, PERE DIEUDONNE, La Traite et I'Esdavage des Congolais
par les Europe ens. Wetteren, Belgium, 1929.
Le Trafic Negrier, d'aprbs les livres de commerce du capitaine
,
,, /(
-
-
TALBOT, P. A., In the Shadow of the Bush. London, 1912.
-
TAUXIER, Louis, Le Noir du Soudan; Pays Mossi et Gourounsi. Paris,
1912.
, Le Noir du Yatenga. Paris, 1917.
354 THE MYTH OF THE NEGRO PAST
THOMAS, WM. H., The American Negro: What He Was, What He Is,
and What He May Become. New York, 1901.
TILLINGHAST, JOSEPH A., The Negro in Africa and America. New
York, 1902. (Publication of the American Economic Assoc., 3rd
series, Vol. Ill, No. 2, May, 1902. Pp. 407-637.)
TORDAY, E., and JOYCE, T. A., "Notes on the Ethnography of the
BaMbala." Jour. Royal Anth. Inst., 35 -.398-426, 1905.
*
,
'Documents ethnographiques concernants les populations du
Congo beige." Annalcs de la Musee du Congo Beige. Ethnographie,
Anthropologie, ser. 3, t. 2. Brussels, 1910.
-,"Notes ethnographiques sur les peuples communement appeles
Bakuba, ainsi que sur les peuplades apparentees. Les Bushongo."
Annalcs de la Musce du Congo Beige. Ethnographic, Anthropologie,
ser. 3, t. 2. Brussels, 1910.
TURNER, LORENZO West African Survivals in the Vocabulary of
D.,
Gullah, presented before the Modern Language Association, New
York Meeting, December, 1938.
Some Problems Involved in the Study of the Negroes in the
,
-
WARD, IDA, The Phonetic and Tonal Structure of Efkik. Cambridge,
I933-
, Introduction to the Ibo Language. Cambridge, 1936.
WASHINGTON, B. T., The Story of the Negro. New York, 1909. (2
vols.)
WEATHERFORD, W. D., The Negro from Africa to America. New York,
- Amer. Jour.
WEEKS, JOHN
, Among
WERNER, ALICE,
H.,
Sociol., 29:290-304, 1923.
Among Congo
the Primitive
Cannibals. Philadelphia, 1913.
BaKongo. London, 1914.
Structure and Relationship of African Languages.
London, 1930.
WESTERGAARD, W., "Account of the Negro Rebellion on St. Croix,
Danish West Indies, 1759.*' J ur Negro Hist., n .-50-61, 1926.
-
-
WESTERMANN, D., Die Kpelle, ein Negerstamm in Liberia. Gottingen,
1921.
WHEELER,
,
A Study of
J. D., A
the Ewe Language. London, 1930.
Law of Slavery, being a
Practical Treatise on the
Compilation of all the Decisions made on that Subject in the Sev-
eral Courts of the United Stales and State Courts. New York, 1837.
WHITE, NEWMAN, American Negro Folk-Songs. Cambridge, 1928.
WILKIE, M. B., Ga Grammar, Notes, and Exercises. London, 1930.
-
WISH, HARVEY, "American Slave Insurrections before 1861." Jour.
-
Negro
,
Hist., 22 :299 32b, 1937.
:
-
WoRKxJ^JST.7 "Some Geechee Folk-Lore." Southern Workman, 35:
633-635,^905.
, (ed.), Negro Year Book, 1918-1919. Tuskegee Institute, AM
YOUNG, DONALD, American Minority Peoples. New York, 1932.
-^-r , "Research~?ffemorandum on Minority Peoples in the Depres-
sion." Bulletin 31, Social Science Research Council, New York,
1937-
INDEX
357
358 INDEX
Boas, F., cited, 52, 303 Carneiro, E., cited, 16, 301
Boating, as method of enslavement, 108 Carolina, South, concentration of slaves
Bontemps, A., cited, 08, 310 in, 118
Bosman, W., cited, 44, 56, 305, 306 sources of slaves imported into, 48, 49
Botkin, B. A., quoted, 238 Carolinas, South and North, differing
Botume, E. H., cited, 104, 310 proportions of masters and slaves
quoted, 146, 150, 184, 193 f. in districts of, 117 f.
Bouche, 1'Abbe P., cited, 28$, 325 Catterall, H. T., cited, 241, 320
Bouet-Willaumez, L. E., cited, 50, 51, quoted, 89 f.
305 Caul, survival in United States of Afri-
Bowdich, T. E., cited, 56, 305 can beliefs concerning, 190
Brackett, 305
Centers, urban, in New World, I22f.
J. R., cited, 48, 103,
quoted, H7f.
Chapman, C. E., cited, 91, 309
Brazil, project for ethnographic re-
Character, childlike, of Negro, hypoth-
search on Negro cultures in, 330 f. esis of analyzed, 293
recent research on Negro cultures of,
Charlevoix, F. X., cited, 44, 35
i6f.
slave revoltsin, 91 f.
Charms, African categories of, survival
syncretism between African and of among United States Negroes,
traits ofCongo culture found among categories of, among United States
Cobb, J. B., cited, 192, 316 Courlander, H., cited, 17, 264, 302, 322
Color, light, explanations of prestige of, Cronise, F. M., cited, 284, 324
among Negroes, 126 f. quoted, 286 f.
role of, in
promoting acculturation, 125 Cross-roads, survival of African beliefs
"Colored .Peoples' Time," 153 in, among New World Negroes,
Custom, African, of turning head when unusual types of, attitudes toward as
laughing, retention of in United African survival, 206
States, 151 Debtors, enslavement of, as factor in
Customs, tribal, mechanisms determin- selection of slaves, 109
ing survival of, in British Guiana, de Cleene, N., cited, 77. 307
52 de Gaye, J. A., cited, 289, 325
in New World, 50 f. Deities, West African, survival of in
in United States, 52 f. Louisiana vodun cult, 246 f.
Delafosse, M., cited, 77, 289, 307, 325
Dahomey, culture of, outlined, 61 ff. Derivation, of Negro magic in United
pidgin French of, resemblances of, to States, 235 ff.
New World Negro speech, 285 f. Desplagnes, L., cited, 77, 307
project for ethnographic study in, 329 Dett, R. N., cited, 268, 323
records of slaves imported from, 49, 50 de Vassiere, P., quoted, 121 f.
Donnan, E., cited, 44, 45, 46, 305 Evolution, social, as concept in study of
quoted, 46 f., 89 New World Negro cultures, 14
Dornas, J. filho, cited, 16, 301 Exploitation, by West African rulers,
Dorsainvil, J. C, cited, 17, 301 67 ff.
quoted, 22 f.
Doyle, B. W., cited, 6, 210, 211, 300, 318 Factors, psychological, in retarding or
quoted, 149, 150, 153, 154, 208 accelerating New World Negro
Drewry, W. S., quoted, 103 acculturation, 140!
Dubois, W. E. B., cited, 2, 43, 305 Faine, J., cited, 291, 325
States Negro religion, 208 Father, place of, in African family, 175
in United States Negro churches, 212 f. in slave family, 178
on, as African survival, 166 project for ethnographic study in, 329
Frazier, E. F., cited, 126, 170, 210, 312, slaving operations in, 35
315, 3i8 Gonzalcs, A. E., quoted, 255, 277
quoted, 3, 31 f., no, 135 f, 173 f., 176, Good, and evil, absence of dichotomy be-
177, 178, 183, 185, 199, 202, 317
tween, in Negro thought, 242 f.
French West Indies, sources of slaves Grandpre, cited, 37, 304
Grant, F. C. F., cited, 289, 325
imported into, 48
Great gods, role of, in West African re-
Freyre, G., cited, 16, 301
ligion, 70
"Frizzled" hen, survival of African be-
Greenberg, Joseph, field work of, among
liefs concerning, in New World, Hausa and Maguzawa, 302 17,
237
Greenberg, J. H., cited, 220, 319
Frustration, Negro religion in United
Griaule, M., cited, 77, 269, 307
States conceived as compensation
Group, local, as unit of West African
for, 207 political structure, 65 ff.
Fuller, S., quoted, 49 f.
Guiana, British, origins of slaves im-
Funeral, delayed, as African survival ported into, 48
among United States Negroes, Guiana, project for ethnographic studies
202-204 of Negro cultures in, 331
importance of, in New World Negro Guinea Coast, as principal area of slav-
societies as African survival, ing, 36
197 ff. Gullah Islands, correspondences with
West taki-taki in speech of Negroes
African, role and function of, in in,
ancestral cult, 63 2g 3
forms of animal tales in, 275
quoted, 109, 255, 281-294, 324 role of, in African life, 156 ff.
Johnson, C. S., cited, 203, 204, 210, 227, Laboratory, historical in New World,
317, 3i8, 319 for study of cultural change, 15 ff.
quoted, 4, 119, 163, 170, 171!, 174 f., Labouret, H., cited, 17, 77, 302, 307
177, 179, 186, 187, 200, 205, 213 Language, diversity of African, as factor
Johnson, G. B., cited, 263, 291, 322, 325 in suppression of Africanisms in
Johnston, Sir H. H., cited, 10, 42, 91, 93, principal types of, 79
301, 304, 309 structural forms of retained in New
quoted, 42, 94 World Negro speech, 281
Jones, C. C, cited, 210, 318 study of survivals of in the United
quoted, 155, 210 States, 29!
Jones, R. J., cited, 212, 318 Languages, of New World Negroes,
quoted, 212 f., 225, 226, 227 project for study of, 337
Jordan, river, importance of to United West African, structural elements of
States Negroes, as African sur- found in New World Negro
vival, 234 speech, 285-294
Journal de la Soc. des Africanistes, Latin America, project for ethnographic
source for study of West African studies of Negro cultures in, 332
status of historical records on slaving
cultures, 77, 306
in, 50
Journal of the Royal Anthropological
West Laveau, Marie, priestess of Louisiana
Institute, source for study of
vodun cult, 247 f .
Leiris, M., and Schaeffner, A., cited, 77, Malingering, by slaves, to avoid labor,
307 101 f.
Linton, R., cited, 10, 14, 87, 301, 309 Marronage, frequency of, in Haiti, 93
Literature, periodical, on cultures of Maryland, proportions of masters and
slaving area, 77-81 slaves in, 118
"Little people," survival of West Afri- Material culture, Negro accommoda-
can concept of, among New World tion to European patterns in, 136
Negroes, 254 fT. Materials, for comparative study of
West African types 256 fT. of, Negro music, 266
Loango, project for ethnographic study "Maternal" family, among United States
in, 330 Negroes, economic causes of,
development of, 90 f.
Stoney, S. G., cited, 272, 275, 323 Tales, African, mechanisms permitting
retention of, in New World, 138
Students, of United States Negro, neg-
lect of modern sources on African
New World Negro, Old World dis-
cultures, by, 54 fT.
tribution of, 273!
Old World, New World Negro ver-
Studies, historical, of Negro, project in,
sions of, 273 f.
336 ff.
Tar baby, as West African survival,
psychological, of Negroes, project in,
254 f
338 f.
controversy over origin of, 272 f.
Study, comparative, of Negro cultures, Tauxier, L., cited, 77, 307
necessity for, 326 f. Taxation, forms and extent of, in native
"Substantives of place," in West African West African kingdoms, 68 f.
and New World Negro speech, West African systems of, I57f.
289 Taylor, C. E., cited, 92, 309
Subterfuge, Negro techniques of, neces- Techniques, cross-disciplinary, employed
sity for considering African past in establishing tribal origins of
in analyzing, 156 New World Negroes, 34
INDEX 373
Tillinghast, J. A., cited, 41, 42, 54, 55, Uncle Remus tales, African derivation
304, 306 of, 75
quoted, 24 f., 56, 57, 58 Old World distribution of types of,
Time, attitude toward, as African sur- 273
vival, 153 Underground railroad, 104
Time divisions, African, retention of by United States, project for ethnographic
Negroes in United States, 153 study of Negro culture in, 332 f.
Togoland, project for ethnographic study sources of slaves brought to, 44 ff.
in, 329 Urbanism, differential effect of, on
Tone, manifestations of, in New World Negro acculturation, 122 ff.
role of, in West African world view, Ward, L, cited, 277, 323
71 Ware, C. P., cited, 262, 268, 322, 323
Trinidad, attitudes toward marriage War\ t attitudes of Caribbean Negroes
among Negroes of, i68f. toward, 155 f.
forms of Negro religious life in, 221- Wars, West African, as slave raids, 108
225 Washington, B. T., quoted, 20 f.
374 INDEX
Water rituals, of United States Ne- Woman, elderly, place of, in United
groes, 233 States Negro family, 175, 176
Wealth, inheritance of in West African Women, as heads of Negro families in
society, 65 f. United States, 173
Weatherford, W. D., cited, 54, 55, 306 economic position of, in West Africa,
quoted, 25 f. 62
Weatherford, W. D., and Johnson, C S., labor by, in Africa, misconception of
quoted, 25 f., 42 role of by students of United
Weatherly, V. G., quoted, II, 13!, 301 States Negro, 58
Weeks, J. H., cited, 78, 308 place of, in New World kinship group-
Werner, A., cited, 79, 38 ings, i68f.
quoted, 79 place of, in West African family life,
West Africa, French, ethnographic re- 64-66
ports on tribes of, 77 position of in United States Negro
West Indies, African religious beliefs families as African survival, 173
and practices in, 215 ff. ff.
Wish, H., cited, 97, 104, 310 Young, D., cited, 145, 314
quoted, 88, 89 f., 97, 98
Witches, African elements in New Zeitschrift jiir Ethnologic, source for in-
World Negro beliefs concerning, formation on West African cul-
259 ff- tures, 77, 307