Puneet Varma (Editor)

The Black Gauntlet: A Tale of Plantation Life in South Carolina

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
1860

Author
  
Mary Howard Schoolcraft

Language
  
English

Originally published
  
1860

Genre
  
Anti-Tom literature

The Black Gauntlet: A Tale of Plantation Life in South Carolina

Media type
  
Print (Hardcover and Paperback) & E-book

Pages
  
c. 100 (May change depending on the publisher and the size of the text)

Similar
  
The Ebony Idol, The Cabin and Parlor; or - Slaves, Uncle Robin - in His Cabin, Little Eva: The Flower of the So, Aunt Phillis's Cabin

The Black Gauntlet: A Tale of Plantation Life in South Carolina (also known as simply The Black Gauntlet) is an anti-Tom novel written in 1860 by Mary Howard Schoolcraft, published under her married name of Mrs. Henry Rowe Schoolcraft.

Contents

Background

Mary Howard (d. 1878) was born into the planter slaveholding elite of South Carolina. She was the second wife of the widower and ethnologist Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, who was 53 when they married in 1846. They lived in Washington, DC and after their deaths were each buried in the Congressional Cemetery.

The Black Gauntlet is an example of the pro-slavery plantation literature genre that was written in response to the anti-slavery novel Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852) by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Critics accused Stowe of exaggerating (or inaccurately depicting) Southern society, slaveholders, slaves and the institution of slavery in the South.

The Black Gauntlet is unusual as a late example, as the majority were written and published soon after Uncle Tom's Cabin in 1852. The competing novels were part of the public, rhetorical arguments between North and South in the years of rising political and social tensions before the American Civil War.

Plot

Unlike other anti-Tom novels, The Black Gauntlet does not have a discernible narrative. It is essentially a collection of speeches by characters who argue in favor of American slavery as an institution. Some of the speeches were created by Schoolcraft. In other cases, she refers to quotations from other published works, including the Bible and Uncle Tom's Cabin.

In other works

Schoolcraft's work used quotes which had also appeared in Aunt Phillis's Cabin (1852) by Mary Henderson Eastman, a native Virginian.

References

The Black Gauntlet: A Tale of Plantation Life in South Carolina Wikipedia


Similar Topics