11 pages • 22 minutes read
Rape was one of the most prevalent means white male slave masters and overseers wielded control over enslaved people—particularly Black women. It was a method of reinforcing both the profitability of their chattel (slave masters were often not averse to selling off children who resulted from their assaults of enslaved women) and of ensuring the durability of the white patriarchal hierarchy on which plantation life was built.
Nelson’s poem opens with the scene of her great-great-grandmother being raped—a horrific crime which eventually resulted in her own birth. Thus, Nelson potentially complicates the reader’s feelings about the births of children who resulted from rape in the antebellum South and, inevitably, feelings about how the African American community at large resulted.
In reimagining her ancestor’s life, Nelson considers Diverne may have regarded her pregnancy not as further evidence of her victimhood, but of her triumph over a system that diminished her humanity. Diverne was shipped to the U.S. from Jamaica in the 1850s and in her teens was sold to a slave owner in Kentucky. While working on The Homeplace, Nelson returned to Hickman, Kentucky, where her maternal family originates, and began to collect stories from the relatives still residing there—including a
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