Jubilee (novel)
First edition | |
Author | Margaret Walker |
---|---|
Cover artist | William Hofmann |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Historical novel |
Publisher | Houghton Mifflin |
Publication date | 1966 |
Media type | Print (hardcover) |
Pages | 536 pages |
Jubilee (1966) is a historical novel written by Margaret Walker, which focuses on the story of a biracial slave during the American Civil War. It is set in Georgia and later in various parts of Alabama in the mid-19th century before, during, and after the Civil War.
Plot summary
Jubilee is the semi-fictional account of Vyry Brown, based on the life of author Margaret Walker's grandmother, Margaret Duggans Ware Brown. Vyry Brown is a mixed-race slave — the unacknowledged daughter of her master — who is born on the Dutton plantation in Georgia. The novel follows her experiences from early childhood to adult life.
The story of Vyry's life in the novel spans three major periods of American history: Slavery, the Civil War, and Reconstruction.
Characters
- Sis Hetta – Vyry's mother; a slave and lover of John Dutton, she dies in the novel's opening chapter at the age of 29, when Vyry is a very small child, she has 15 children.
- Caline, May Liza, and Lucy – servants in the big house who work with Aunt Sally and Vyry. Lucy is Vyry's older half sister, by Hetta's slave husband. After being beaten and branded for running away, Lucy succeeds in escaping to freedom.
- John Morris Dutton – "Marse" or "Marster John," he was also the owner of the Dutton Plantation; his slave mistress, Sis Hetta, is Vyry's mother, is loving towards Vyry, promises her freedom after his death (however this unfortunately never happens), he breaks his leg in an accident while in his carriage.
- Miss Salina – the wife of Marse John and mother of his two legitimate children. She is also known as Big Missy, and is cruel to the slaves, is harsh to Vyry as she is born around the same time as Miss Salina and John Dutton's daughter, Lillian.
- Vyry – the protagonist of the novel. She is a dynamic main character. Vyry is the daughter of Sis Hetta, who dies as the novel opens, and her master, John Dutton. She is a slave, but her skin is so fair she can "pass" as white. She is a solemn, generous woman who has many skills.
- Aunt Sally – a slave in the house on the Dutton Plantation. She is the cook and teaches Vyry everything she knows. She acts as a mother to Vyry.
- Grandpa Tom – a black slave that works on the Dutton Plantation, is told to leave the finest horses for John Dutton. Grimes, the overseer, finds it rude and inaporpiate when Grandpa Tom does not allow Grimes to use a fine horse and kills Grandpa Tom.
- Randall Ware – a literate black man who was born free and is a blacksmith. He always needs a white guardian with him due to the strict laws against blacks in the South. He promises to marry Vyry and buy her freedom, but Marse John won't permit it.
- Jim, Minna, and Harry – Vyry’s children.
- Miss Lillian – the daughter of Marse John and Big Missy. She is about the same age as Vyry, her unacknowledged half sister, whom she strongly resembles. She and Vyry play together when they are little. Unlike her mother, she is not cruel but gullible and easily manipulated. When they are young, a woman mentions that the two girls look similar, which upsets Miss Salina very much. She has two children with Kevin, named Robert and Susan
- Grimes – the overseer on the Dutton Plantation, kills Grandpa Tom.
- Innis Brown – a slave freed by the war, who meets Vyry at the war's end, protects her from an attacker, and marries her legally as Randall Ware is not present.
- John Dutton Jr. – son of John Dutton and Miss Salina, serves in the Confederate Army, gets shot during the war and dies at home, takes over plantation when father dies.
- Brother Ezekiel – "Brother Zeke", priest for black slaves, literate black man, helps Vyry and Randall Ware send letters to each other and marries the two.
- Kevin McDougall – Miss Lillian's husband, hates military soldiers, war, and the idea of violence (unlike John Dutton).
- Fanny Crenshaw – John Dutton Jr.'s childhood friend, could have married John Dutton Jr if he is healthy and well, she takes care of him towards the end of his life.
Setting (location)
The historic novel is set in parts of Georgia and Alabama, such as:
- Terrell County: Where Vyry is born
- Lee County, Georgia: Where the Dutton Plantation is
- Troy, Pike County: Where the wagon breaks down and Vyry and Innis settle down, befriend the Jacobsons; Vyry and Innis' house is burned down by the KKK
- Luverne, Alabama: a very poor town that Vyry and Innis passed through
- Greenville, Butler County, Georgia: Where Vyry and Innis live permanently, Vyry sells goods in the marketplace
- Selma, Alabama: Where Randall Ware says he will take Jim to school
Setting (time)
1835–1870
Historical events (chronological order)
Before the Civil War, cooks were being accused of poisioning their masters, and religion was used to justify the absence and presence of segregation and slavery. Slaves identified themselves with the Old Testament Hebrew slaves who were liberated with Moses, and whites followed the New Testament as priests preached for slavery as they considered it to be a natural and righteous state. Jubilee also takes place during the time of the Civil War and Reconstruction where violence from the Ku Klux Klan was unfortunately common. Specific events from this historical novel (in chronological order) include:
- 1857: The South won the victory with the Dred Scott case.
- March 4, 1861: Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated the sixteenth President of the United States. (184)
- April 1861: Guns of Charleston, South Carolina, had fired on the Federal flag at Fort Sumner. Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America, had declared the seceded states of the Confederacy to be in a state of rebellion which must be put down if the union were to be preserved. (195)
- July 1861: The capitol of the Confederacy was moved from Montgomery to Richmond. (201)
- 1862: The South was winning the war." (208) Battles of Pea Ridge and Shiloh
- July 18, 1862: 'Fighting Joe' Wheeler was named in command of the cavalry of the Army of Tennessee by General Bragg. (213)
- Summer of 1863: Battle of Gettysburg with General Robert E. Lee and his Army of Northern Virginia which "failed in their second attempt to invade northern territory" (214) (Union Victory)
- July 1863: Battle of Vicksburg with General Ulysses S. Grant. (Union victory)
- 1863: Marked a turning of the tide in the winning of the war by Union forces (245); word spread that Abraham Lincoln would issue a proclamation to free slaves. Thousands of slaves fled their plantations. The entire South saw a whole disappearance of blacks who fled to the "protection of the Union armies" (246). Abraham Lincoln was seen as a Moses to the blacks; there was also a change in the technology used in the war. Soldiers now fought with repeating rifles and longer projectiles. The navy also began to use iron-clad gunboats instead of wooden sail ships.
- February 17, 1864: Congress and Secretary Memminger had passed a law saying that people need to turn in their paper currency and buy long-term war bonds at 4% interest. If bills at least $100 were not turned in by April 1, 1864, exchanged for bonds, the money would be reduced to at least one third of its value.
- August 7, 1864: End of the naval battle on Mobile Bay, Union victory.
- January 1, 1865: Emancipation Proclamation repeated in Georgia (Vyry and family are free)
- 1868: Ku Klux Klan rose for three days and nights during the national elections, resulting in terrible violence
Events in Vyry's life (chronological order)
- Sis Hetta dies from childbirth
- Vyry becomes a slave at a toddler age
- Granny Ticey and Mammy Sukey die
- Miss Salina hangs Vyry by her thumbs in the closet for breaking one of her china dishes
- Brother Zeke baptizes Vyry as she now enters womanhood
- Grandpa Tom is killed by Grimes for not giving Grimes a fine horse (Grandpa Tom is following Marse John's Orders)
- Aunt Sally is sold as Miss Salina does not like her; Salina and John Dutton go through cooks trying to find a cook who can cook as well as Aunt Sally. John Dutton considers selling Aunt Sally a mistake until Vyry is discovered as a cook whose food is identical to that of Aunt Sally's. Vyry is put into the Big House and works as a cook.
- Vyry meets Randall Ware as she is supposed to give him food. He immediately takes interest in Vyry; whereas Vyry only develops love for him after he promises her freedom
- Lucy badtalks Miss Salina during a party, gets beaten, runs away, is caught, and gets branded
- 4 July celebration- priests rant about slaves listening to their masters
- Lucy runs away a second time and manages to escape from the Dutton Plantation
- Vyry asks John Dutton if she can marry Randall Ware. Knowing how precious of a cook Vyry is, John Dutton decides that the two may get married only after his death(however it doesn’t happen)
- John Dutton dies
- John Dutton Jr. dies
- Kevin dies
- Salina dies
- Vyry and kids are free after a man comes to emancipate the slaves
- Vyry meets Innis Brown as he tries to protect her and Miss Lillian from a robber
- Vyry and Innis move to Alabama as they get married
- Vyry and Innis get flooded out of their house by the Chattahochee River and lose most of their belongings
- Vyry and Innis sign the contract for another house, stating that they must pay off the house with crops made on the land, however the land has bad soil. Vyry and Innis cannot pay off the house or make a living
- Vyry and Innis leave to Troy, Pike County
- Vyry and Innis' house is burned down by KKK
- Vyry and Innis travel to Luvenere
- Vyry and Innis get land in Butler County near Greensville
- Vyry visits Ms. Lucy and Ms. Lillian in Georgia
- Vyry and Innis move into their permanent house
- Vyry earns a living by selling goods in a nearby town
- Vyry helps a woman give birth as Vyry hears the womans screams while selling her goods in the town. The woman does not take Vyry as a black woman, for Vyry's skin is fair. Vyry helps to settle racial confusion or stereotypes the woman and her husband have. The woman and her husband take note that Vyry is kind and gentle and feel comfortable around Vyry.
- Woman and family help Vyry build her house
- Innis Brown beats Jim
- Randall Ware visits and takes Jim to school in the city
- Vyry expects a baby with Innis Brown
Court case
In 1978, Margaret Walker sued Alex Haley, claiming that his 1976 novel Roots: The Saga of an American Family had violated Jubilee's copyright by borrowing from her novel. The case was dismissed.[1]
Adaptation
Jubilee was adapted into a three-act opera by Ulysses Kay, to a libretto by Donald Dorr; it was commissioned by Opera/South and premiered in 1976.[2]
References
- ↑ Frankel, D. J. "Margaret Walker ALEXANDER, Plaintiff, v. Alex HALEY, Doubleday & Company, Inc., and Doubleday Publishing Company, Defendants", 460 F. Supp. 40 (S.D.N.Y. 1978).
- ↑ Recent American Opera: a production guide