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Books by and about Frederick
Douglass
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave: Written
by Himself /
My Bondage and My Freedom
The Life and Times of Frederick Douglass /
Frederick Douglass: Selected speeches and Writings
The Oxford Frederick Douglass Reader /
Frederick Douglass by Booker T. Washington
The Mind of Frederick Douglass /
Love Across Color Lines: Ottilie Assing and Frederick
Douglass
Black Hearts of Men /
Martin Delany, Frederick Douglass, and the Politics of Representative
Identity
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Resolving the Oedipal
Complex:
Douglass'
1845 Narrative
A Domestic Tale of Desire and Loss
By Rudolph Lewis In
“Myths of Masculinity: The Oedipus Complex and Douglass’s
1845 Narrative”
(The
Psychoanalysis of Race
published by Columbia University Press, 1998), Gwen Bergner
used the language of psychoanalysis in her effort to get at the
underlying text and meaning of Frederick Douglass’s first
autobiography. Her novel approach, Bergner points out, is a
“second wave” of Douglass criticism. Among her cohorts she
included Deborah McDowell, Jenny Franchot, Valerie Smith, and
George P. Cunningham. With her professed use of Freud and Lacan,
Bergner concluded Douglass at 28 years old wrote a text that is
“an icon of male sufficiency.” The 1845 Narrative,
according to Bergner, was designed to “represent the
consolidation of masculine identity against the image of a
woman’s castrated body.”
Bergner's
reductionist view of Douglass' life is sustained by a feminist
ideology in which man, any man, is the enemy, the center of
power, the Phallus of feminine repression. In her exploration of
the 1845 Narrative, Bergner
unnecessarily restricted her analysis of the text to two
reported incidents: Captain Anthony’s whipping of
Hester Bailey, when Douglass was six or seven, about 1825; and
Fred’s fight with Ed “The Snake” Covey, when Fred was
about fifteen or sixteen, about 1833. These scenes, according to
Bergner, are exceedingly spectral, an indicator of Douglass’s
will to power, that is, he received “voyeuristic pleasure”
from the abuse of women’s bodies, especially those of black
women.
For
Bergner, these two events, shaped and determined Douglass'
sexist character and his "homoerotic" identification
with white male culture. These two scenes are oedipal moments.
In the first, Douglass represses his identification with his
Aunt Hester, symbolic of the mother and her race, and identifies
with Captain Anthony, the man with the whip; Captain Anthony,
Bergner asserts, becomes “an object of desire, not a rival.”
Like Freud’s Wolf Man, “Douglass wards off the terror of the
master/father’s authority by confining vulnerability to the
(African-American) woman and by adopting a masculine
identity.”
The
fight with Covey is merely symbolic of the lesson Fred learned
from his white master/father Captain Anthony, that is, physical
mastery trumps female passivity. Douglass thereafter began his
project of the “erasure of the feminine.” On gaining his
freedom, Douglass produced a text, a mirrored desire, according
to Bergner, that needs “women’s castration and
humiliation.” According to Bergner’s mentor, Deborah
McDowell, “black women’s backs become the parchment on which
Douglass narrates his linear progression from bondage to
freedom.
The
1845 Narrative,
trapped in Bergner’s ideological grid, deserves a more
critical openness. The critical reader can get beyond her
distorted view by casting Freud and Lacan and maybe Foucault
over a much larger extent of Douglass’s tale and its
representation of black male subjectivity under a slave regime.
We need to consider how a slave, in particular Douglass, managed
to step beyond the modern discipline that reduces humanity to
mere functional objects for the profit and pleasure of others.
We need to mark how Douglass attempted to unmask the actual
character of slavery, in Foucault’s terms, a power/knowledge
regime, its practices, rather than its beliefs.
The
1845 Narrative, as
does our analysis, begins with Douglass’s birth and his
development as a child, roughly from 1817-1824. His mother was
Harriet Bailey, “the daughter of Isaac and Betsy Bailey, both
colored, and quite dark.” Douglass himself, from appearances,
was a white child with frizzled hair. Though there exists no
“authentic record,” Douglass suggests strongly that Aaron
Anthony, that is, Captain Anthony, was his biological father.
The evidence of this perverse fact was sustained by the oral
lore of the black families living on Colonel Lloyd’s
plantation, by proximity and opportunity, by his mother’s
status as property, and Captain Anthony’s relationship with
Hester, his mother’s sister.
Douglass
wrote that his master/father separated him and his mother,
“when I was but an infant,” one year old. His father’s
intent was “to hinder the development” of his affection
toward his mother, “to blunt and destroy the natural affection
of the mother for the child.” Rather than the Aunt Hester
whipping scene, the Harriet-Captain Anthony relationship
establishes the central oedipal conflict in Douglass’s
domestic narrative. The father, Captain Anthony, in effect,
attempted to castrate his son, to cut Fred off as a rival for
his mother’s body (symbolically, the bodies of all women), to
sever any emotional attachment to black womanhood and the norms
of humanity. This was not a singular act, but, according to
Douglass, a “common custom” of how power in his part of
Maryland made a male child into a slave.
In
this exposé of family relations, Douglass unveiled how the
power of slavery asserted itself in the minute particulars of
the birth, life, and death of individuals, how the evil,
mechanistic principles that were American slavery dispersed
themselves among the populace and how their dehumanizing
constraint was effected by individuals in a manner as normal as
marriage and whiteness.
He
wrote, “I do not recollect of ever seeing my mother by the
light of day. She was with me in the night. She would lie down
with me, and get me to sleep, but long before I waked she was
gone. Very little communication ever took place between us. . .
. I was not allowed to be present during her illness, at her
death, or burial.” With respect to black male subjectivity,
the operatives of the slave regime consciously practiced, what
McDowell calls, the “erasure of the feminine.” Recalling his
besmeared sensibility toward his mother, Douglass wrote “I
received the tidings of her death with much the same emotions .
. . at the death of a stranger.” Because of his mother’s
absence, Douglass’s love for his mother was more a matter of
the imagination. As a result, Douglass tended to idealize women,
as can be seen in his portraits of his grandmother and Sophia
Auld.
Harriet
Bailey, the erased biological mother, was, however, supplemented
by Fred’s grandmother, Betsey,
a woman very religious. She obviously gave the young Fred
more than what the system had bargained for; evidently, she
wrote a spiritual narrative on his heart and his conscience that
emphasized care and tenderness. Douglass expended considerable
text to describe his affections for his grandmother, who was
passed from master to master. Old, crippled, having raised
several generations of white and black children, his grandmother
was sent out into the woods to fend for herself.
Douglass
wrote, “If my poor old grandmother now lives, she lives to
suffer in utter loneliness; she lives to remember and mourn over
the loss of children, the loss of grandchildren, and the loss of
great grandchildren. . . . my poor old grandmother, the devoted
mother of twelve children, is left alone, in yonder little hut,
before a few dim embers. . . . and there are none of her
children or grandchildren present, to wipe from her wrinkled
brow the cold sweat of death or to place beneath the sod her
fallen remains.”
The
slave child, from many points of power, is pressured to
construct an identity that is less than his own estimation.
Bound by slavery’s bio-power, Douglass’s search for
empowerment does not seem to be biologically motivated, as
Bergner contends; his intellectual pursuits and imaginings seem
designed to defend his own personal worth and value. At the
beginning of the Narrative, Douglass
wrote, “I could not tell why I ought to be deprived.”
Douglass wanted to know why the Law, the Name of the Father,
should be withheld from him: that all men are created equal and
endowed with inalienable rights. Douglass did not equate a will
to know to a will to dominate, except reflexively, that self
enthralled by evil and the perversions of slavery.
At
six or seven years old, Douglass cared enough for his
subjectivity, to “problematize” his existence. “Why am I a
slave? Why are some people slaves and others masters?”
Douglass wrote, years later, in an essay entitled “A Child’s
Reasoning.” He concluded, “These were perplexing questions
and very troublesome to my childhood.”
Set
aside as a slave, as property, Douglass constructed an identity,
not on power as domination, but on a sense of lack, of loss, of
absence, of being “deprived” by the caprice of others.
Gradually, he learned that individuals behave in ways that are
not of their own making, that there is a linguistic veil through
which one must trespass in order to behold the true reality of
man. For language, as well as corporeal punishment, was used to
constrain and define identity.
In his essay “Child’s Reasoning,” Douglass wrote,
“I was told by some one very early that ‘God up in the
sky’ had made all things, and had made black people to be
slaves and white people to be masters” and that God “knew
what was best for everybody.”
For
Fred, this metadiscourse of religion was not satisfactory; it
invited suspicion. In that God was just and merciful, the child
reasoned, the whipping of his Aunt Hester and the other
occurrences of whippings and mutilations could not have been
sanctioned by God. Moreover, the child discovered, all blacks
were not slaves: his Uncle Noah and Aunt Jenny had escaped to
freedom; other slaves spoke of being “stolen from Africa.”
The fictions of slavery’s project were easily debunked, even
from a child’s perspective. Douglass concluded, “I was
always a fugitive from slavery in spirit and purpose.”
In
writing his Narrative against
the institutional narrative of slavery – its norms, mores,
laws, customs, its religion, Douglass provided a different way
of feeling, of responding to slavery, beyond the shibboleths of
white abolitionist thinking, like that of William Lloyd
Garrison. His domestic tale generates another sensibility, rich,
random, multiple realities of concrete everyday occurrences, the
fantasized perversions of power.
Among the most poignant of the narrated events is indeed
the six-year-old Douglass witnessing the torture of his Aunt
Hester. In a sense it replicates his oedipal anxiety in more
graphic terms, the phantasm of slavery’s lived reality, its
castration of freedom and human dignity.
In
this domestic drama, Douglass delved underneath the surface of
the Southern gentleman’s mythic image. Douglass wrote, “Aunt
Hester went out one night . . . when my master desired her
presence. He had ordered her not to go out evenings, and warned
her that she must never let him catch her in company with a
young man . . . Ned Roberts, generally called Lloyd’s Ned. Why
master was so careful of her, may be safely left to
conjecture.” Though sketched by Douglass with Victorian
restraint, the whipping scene mirrors the polymorphously
perverse character of slavery. Douglass wrote, “He would whip
her to make her scream, and whip her to make her hush; and not
until overcome by fatigue, would he cease to swing the
blood-clotted cowskin.”
The
physical torture and mutilation of his Aunt Hester’s body by
his father is visually exacting and emotionally powerful. What
is more disturbing in the child’s imagination is the sexual
and moral implications of this sadomasochistic act. In this
scene, Douglass observes a father who rejected his paternal
duty, a man who tore him from his mother’s arms and bred her
into an early grave, now jealously engaged in a further
perversion of familial ties, that is, a sexual relationship with
his mother’s sister, Hester Bailey. “It was a blood-stained
gate, the entrance to the hell of slavery, through which I was
about to pass. It was a most terrible spectacle.” Douglass’s
characterization of his father’s manhood seems far from ideal
and far from a model in which he desired to establish an
identification. Men
such as his father, Douglass sought to undermine at every
opportunity.
On
Colonel Lloyd’s plantation and within its network, there were,
however, other men and women who were vehicles of slavery’s
power, other father and mother figures (black and white) upon
which to piece or construct an identity. There was Master Daniel
Lloyd, who, Douglass wrote, “became quite attached to
me, and was a sort of protector of me. He would not allow the
older boys to impose upon me, and would divide his cakes with
me.” Even though consciously in slavery’s service, at
moments and with particular individuals, those associated with
the profit-making of slavery could exhibit some of the
tenderness of humanity.
Douglass’s
account of his seven-year residence in the home of the Aulds in
Fell’s Point, Baltimore, stands out as prominently as that of
his Aunt Hester, in a way more so. In a manner, the Aulds became
the young Fred’s foster parents. His new home, initially, was
a thing of romance. Douglass wrote, “And here I saw what I had
never seen before; it was a white face beaming with the most
kindly emotions; it was the face of my new mistress, Sophia
Auld. I wish I could describe the rapture that flashed through
my soul as I beheld it. It was a new and strange sight to me,
brightening up my pathway with the light of happiness.”
The
child felt special, “chosen from among them all, and was the
first, last, and only choice.” Douglass escaped the hunger,
which caused him to steal; the frost; the cold, damp, clay floor
to which his father had assigned him. The 1845 Narrative
suggests that Lucretia Anthony Auld, Douglass’s half sister
and seemingly the feminine head of the Anthony household,
intervened on her brother’s behalf. His sister Lucretia gave
him his first pair of trousers, as a reward for cleaning off
“the mange” of slavery. Ultimately, Douglass got away from
the Lloyd Plantation, he believed, as a result of “divine
Providence.”
Like
Hester Bailey, Sophia Auld is symbolic of the tortured feminine,
undoubtedly the motif of the 1845 Narrative
and Douglass’s prevailing argument of slavery’s
perverseness, that is, slavery destroys all that is tender in
humanity. When he first went to live with the Aulds, Sophia
treated him “as she supposed one human being ought to treat
another.” Douglass wrote, “Slavery [symbolic of the Father]
soon proved its ability to divest her of these heavenly
qualities. Under its influence, the tender heart became stone,
and the lamb like disposition gave way to one of tiger like
fierceness.”
Within
the triad of Hugh and Sophia Auld, Douglass explained unerringly
how he resolved his oedipal anxiety. Douglass wrote, “What he
most dreaded, that I most desired. What he most loved, that I
most hated. That which to him was a great evil, to be carefully
shunned, was to me a great good, to be diligently sought; and
the argument that he so warmly urged, against my learning to
read, only served to inspire me with a desire and determination
to learn. In learning to read, I owe almost as much to the
bitter opposition of my master, as to the kindly aid of my
mistress. I acknowledge the benefit of both.”
Irony,
a frequent figure of Douglass’s rhetoric, is not a device
usually used by those who seek domination and subjugation.
Frederick Douglass was not one eager to join the majority view
in power politics. He was a gadfly, a man of ethical strength.
In
the 1845 Narrative,
Douglass developed a new emancipatory language, whose ethic must
be just in speaking the truth. Douglass understood early that
“providence,” Lacan’s Other, can break through all
mechanistic designs of modern life to strike at the heart of
personal repression, which keeps the subject from constructing a
moral and ethical self. The Covey incident instead of being a
simple transference of the masculine will to power, as Bergner
contends, signified a spiritual lesson. Douglass wrote, “I
felt as I never felt before. It was a glorious revelation from
the tomb of slavery, to the heaven of freedom.”
Douglass
realized the caprice, the rationality of slavery, must be
countered by whatever means available; that he, as a moral and
ethical agent in the world, must choose to oppose it at every
instance. Douglass wrote, “however I might remain a slave in
form, the day had passed forever when I could be a slave in
fact. I did not hesitate to let it be known . . . the white man
who expected to succeed in whipping me, must also succeed in
killing me.” With the conquest of this final fear, the radical castration
of death, Douglass broke through the linguistic enclosures of
slavery’s power. For the enslaved individual, some actions are
ethically justifiable, not only thievery for food, but also
magic and mumbo-jumbo, and yes, even, violence.
The
ethical use of violence would be a recurring theme throughout
Douglass’s public career. That is, Douglass believed,
righteousness accrues to a violence that opposes a great evil;
God sanctions those who attempt to create a new language of
freedom and a new ethic of human relations. Unlike Bergner’s
Douglass, the one in the 1845 Narrative
understood that forgiveness; understanding; confidence in
the self and humanity; and God’s mercy, always trump
metadiscourses that reduce man to a beast and a cipher of
calculation.
Bibliographic Sources
Bergner,
Gwen. “Myths of Masculinity: The Oedipus Complex and
Douglass’s 1845 Narrative.” In
The
Psychoanalysis of Race. Edited by Christopher Lane. New
York: Columbia University Press, 1998, 241-260.
Douglass,
Frederick, “A Child’s Reasoning.” In
The
Autobiography of Frederick Douglass, 1883 edition.
Http://gnd.let.rug.nl/B/fdouglass/doug04.htm .
Douglass,
Frederick.
Narrative of
the Life of Frederick Douglass: An American Slave, Written By
Himself. First Published, Boston, 1845.
McDowell, Deborah E. “In the First Place:
Making Frederick Douglass and the Afro-American Narrative
Tradition.” In Critical
Essays on Frederick Douglass. Edited by William L. Andrews.
Boston, MA: G.K. Hall & Company, 1971,
192-214.* *
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updated 2 October 2007 |