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February 9, 2001
Ramapo College Professor To Discuss Reissued Novel of 19th
Century Life On Cuban Slaveholders Plantation
(Mahwah) -- Patricia M. Ard, assistant professor of English at
Ramapo College of New Jersey and a Morristown resident, will discuss
the recently reissued Juanita: A Romance of Real Life in Cuba
Fifty Years Ago, Tuesday, March 13 at 1:15 p.m. in the Adler
Theater (on the Ramapo campus). Originally published in 1887 and
reissued in September by the University Press of Virginia, the novel
was written by Mary Peabody Mann, who based it on her experience
of living on a Cuban slaveholders plantation from 1833 to
1835. Ard is the books editor and wrote an introductory essay.
Though a surprising number of middle-class women from the United
States traveled to Cuba in the early 19th century, few possessed
the literary gifts and intellectual connections of Mary Peabody
Mann. Mann was at the center of New England intellectual life: she
was married to Horace Mann, a prominent and effective proponent
of public education; her sister Sophia was married to Nathaniel
Hawthorne; and her sister Elizabeth brought the kindergarten movement
to the United States.
An outgrowth of the Gothic literary tradition in the Americas,
Juanita centers on the extended visit of Helen Wentworth,
a New England teacher, to a childhood friends plantation.
There she witnesses African slaves arrival, sale and gross
mistreatment at the hands of coffee and sugar planters. The novels
namesake is the beautiful mulatta slave with whom the plantation
owners son falls in love. The novel raises questions about
the relation of slavery in the Caribbean to that in the United States,
while also probing the connection between romance and race.
Ards introductory essay reinvigorates the place of women
writers in the American Renaissance and American reform movements.
Showing possible mutual influences between Mann and Nathaniel Hawthorne,
Ard also discusses links between Mann and her contemporary, Harriet
Beecher Stowe. As it brings to light significant aspects of antislavery
feminist authors, Juanita informs the reading of canonical texts
such as Uncle Toms Cabin (1852) and Incidents in
the Life of a Slave Girl (1861). The reissue of Juanita
both introduces contemporary readers to a neglected novel and illuminates
our understanding of 19th century American literature.
This lecture is second in a series, Writers, Voice, Culture,
exploring writers and their work. The Adler Theater is located in
the Angelica and Russ Berrie Center for Performing and Visual Arts. return to top
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