Abstract

Perhaps due to the contemporary critical concern with authorship, the first reprint of History of Mary Prince in 1987,1 more than century and half after the initial publication of the book, has occasioned articles that concentrate exclusively on the question of voice. Mary Prince arrived in London as slave in 1828 and, bullied by her owners, Mr. and Mrs. Wood of Antigua, left them to seek refuge in the Anti-Slavery Society in London in November of the same year. In December 1829 she was employed as domestic servant by Thomas Pringle, secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society in London, who edited and published her memoirs in 1831. story of the illiterate West Indian woman was written down by Susana Strickland, recent convert to Methodism and guest in the Pringles' household at the time. Since as former slave Prince lacked public authority, Pringle inserted numerous testimonies by White Englishmen in the supplement to her History. Thus, even the very first and shortest of all editions of the book included letter by John Wood, Prince's last owner, who testified against her moral character in the public debate following the narrative, and the collective voice of the Birmingham Ladies' Society for Relief of Negro Slaves/' who stepped in to absolve of allegations of fraud Joseph Phillips another witness to Prince's trials. Most of the History's contemporary critics focus on the ex-slave's agency in the proliferation of voices in her narrative. A delightful book that should be widely used in schools etc as well as women's history classes, announces Joan Grant (1988) who hails Mary Prince unconditionally as a 'spokeswoman' for Black people in Britain and the Caribbean (9). The heteroglot voices compete with but do not dominate Mary Prince's fully integrated sense of self, declares Sandra Paquet in her 1992 article (134), emphasizing the connection critics usually draw between the authenticity of the ex-slave's voice and the success of the book as an

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