The Slave Dancer

The Slave Dancer is a children's book written by Paula Fox and published in 1973.[1][2] It tells the story of a boy called Jessie Bollier who witnessed first-hand the savagery of the Atlantic slave trade. The book not only includes a historical account, but it also touches upon the emotional conflicts felt by those involved in transporting the slaves from Africa to other parts of the world. The book received the Newbery Medal in 1974.

The Slave Dancer
The cover of the first edition of the book, published in 1973
AuthorPaula Fox
TranslatorBruce Davis
IllustratorEros Keith
Cover artistEros Keith
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistorical novel
PublisherBradbury Press
Publication date
October 1973
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages176 pages
ISBN0-87888-062-3
OCLC804264
LC ClassPZ7.F838 Sl

Plot

Paula Fox's children's book The Slave Dancer was published in 1973 and is an historical novel that won the Newbery Medal. It tells the story of a thirteen-year-old boy, Jessie Ollier, who is put in a position which allows him to see the African slave trade in person. Jessie is captured at his New Orleans home and brought to an American ship. There he is forced to play the fife in order to keep the other slaves dancing, and thus strong when they arrive at their destination. He is also expected to work around the ship.

It is the beginning of 1840 in New Orleans. In the rain, drunken riverboat workers and slaves alike are celebrating. Jessie Bollier lives in the area with his mother and sister. One evening while he is walking home, the boy is kidnapped. After he is captured he is taken to the ship The Moonlight, a slaver. During the crossing to Africa, Jessie tries to learn as much about the ship and the way things are done there as he can. The captain, Cawthorne, seems mad, the first mate is cruel, and the sailors are concerned solely with making money through the slave trade. When they get to Africa they travel the coast and the captain uses a small boat to go and meet with the African chiefs who are selling people into slavery.

Jessie cannot believe the treatment of the enslaved people that he observes. Once they are taken onto the ship, they are packed as tightly as possible into the hold, ending up on top of one another. Whenever a slave becomes ill he is thrown overboard at once so that the illness will not spread to other slaves. Many of them are still alive when they are tossed into the water, where they are eaten by sharks or drown. Jessie is shocked by what is going on, but tries to keep himself focused on staying alive and getting home to his family. As the journey to America continues, Jessie realizes how much he hates everything around him, including the slaves, as they represent his own enslavement on the ship. He refuses to play the fife and goes to his quarters. He is immediately taken back on deck and flogged for being disobedient. The flogging only makes him think more about everything that is going on around him. He sees the sailors with the same lack of pity they have for the slaves. He hates himself for playing the fife and being part of the entire situation. The journey continues and conditions worsen. The crew is drunk much of the time, the ship dirty, and discipline lax. A slave attacks Nicholas Spark, one of the ship's mates, and Spark shoots and kills him. The only concern the sailors show is for the loss of the profit that the sale of the slave would have brought them.

When the ship is nearing Cuba, another ship approaches it and the captain becomes afraid of what is might represent, as both British and American ships patrol to guard against the slave trade. The crew begins throwing its chains, and then the slaves, into the ocean waters. Jessie can do nothing to stop this, as much as he might like to. He sees even very young children being thrown overboard. He does manage to get a young boy of his own age back to the slave hold, where they hide while their ship sails past the other ship. A fierce storm then arises. After a few days, Jessie and the boy come out of the hold and discover that the ship is sinking. The crew members are either dead or missing. The pair then uses part of the mast to float on, and they manage to swim to shore. Jessie and the boy end up in Mississippi, where they are found by an escaped slave.

The slave is an old man who is living in the woods of Mississippi. He gives them food and helps them regain their health. He then makes arrangements for some other people to take the enslaved boy to the north, where he can be free. He gives directions to Jessie so that he can walk back to New Orleans, which should take three days. The man asks Jessie not to mention him to anyone, as that could lead to the man being recaptured and returned to a life of slavery. Jessie walks back home to his mother and sister but he realizes that he is a changed person. He no longer holds aspirations of becoming rich because he wants nothing to do with anything that might have any connection to slavery. In time, he decides to become an apothecary and moves to Rhode Island, a state where there are no slaves. He sends for his mother and sister to join him and settles into a quite life. He does miss things about the South, and wonders what became of the enslaved boy he had befriended, but never learns anything more about him. In the Civil War he fights for the North. He marries and has a family of his own. One legacy of his experience on the slave ship is that he can no longer stand to hear music, as it reminds him of the dancing of the slaves.

Author's opinion

Paula Fox expressed that for her The Slave Dancer was the most difficult book she had written so far. Being her first historical book she had difficulty trying to be the most accurate with historical events and the descriptions of the time.

Reception

Kirkus Reviews said of the book: "...each of the sailors is sharply individualized, the inhuman treatment of the captives is conveyed straight to the nose and stomach rather than the bleeding heart, and the scenes in which Jessie is forced to play his fife to '"dance the slaves"' for their morning exercise become a haunting, focusing image for the whole bizarre undertaking."[3] In a retrospective essay about the Newbery Medal-winning books from 1966 to 1975, children's author John Rowe Townsend wrote, "In its superficial aspect, The Slave Dancer is a sea-adventure story; yet the true adventure of Jessie Bollier is a spiritual adventure into the most terrible depths of human nature."[4]

gollark: You may appear to be doing nothing, but you're actually very active metabolically.
gollark: You're not doing nothing, so you don't.
gollark: Yes. Seasons are obsolete. We WILL remake them with technology.
gollark: Because 365.25 and all.
gollark: Not even cultural dependence, years are more irritating and complex.

References

  1. Carr, Jo. "Audiobooks For The Road." Horn Book Magazine 70.4 (1994): 436-438. Academic Search Complete. Web. 13 Jan. 2016.
  2. WENDY S. (Feb 3, 1974). "A 'Slave Dancer' Born in Brooklyn". New York Times. p. 84 via ProQuest.
  3. "THE SLAVE DANCER by Paula Fox". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved January 25, 2020.
  4. Townsend, John Rowe (1975). "A Decade of Newbery Books in Perspective". In Kingman, Lee (ed.). Newbery and Caldecott Medal Books: 1966–1975. Boston: The Horn Book, Incorporated. p. 151. ISBN 0-87675-003-X.
Awards
Preceded by
Julie of the Wolves
Newbery Medal recipient
1974
Succeeded by
M. C. Higgins, the Great
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