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A Negro hung alive by the Ribs to a Gallows, plate 2 from the book Narrative of a Five Year's Expedition against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam in Guina ... from the year 1772 to 1777 by Captain J.G. Stedman,
printed December 1, 1792
Published by Joseph Johnson, British, 1738–1809
More Context
Campus Voices
<p>William Blake designed this engraving as an illustration for John Stedman’s <em>Narrative of a Five Years’ Expedition against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam</em>. Stedman was a soldier of the Dutch army in Surinam during the slave rebellion between 1772 and 1779. Surinam, now known as Suriname, lies on the northern coast of South America, between French Guiana and Guyana. Suriname’s rebellious slaves and free former slaves from proximal areas led a large-scale armed revolt that resulted in their expulsion from Suriname and settlement in French Guiana. Blake evokes the range of inhumanity enslaved people faced, including the oversexualization and mutilation of Black bodies.</p><p><strong><em>Runako Campbell, Class of 2021</em></strong><br></p>
Course Content
<p><strong>Student label, AAS 349 / ART 364, Seeing to Remember: Representing Slavery Across the Black Atlantic, Spring 2017:</strong> </p> <p>This engraving by the radical British artist William Blake (1757–1827) is based on a sketch by the Scottish-Dutch soldier John Gabriel Stedman. It comes from a series of engravings that appeared in Stedman’s Narrative of a Five Years Expedition against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam, which is set within the Dutch capture of the British colony of Suriname during the Second Anglo-Dutch War (1667). After Suriname was overtaken, the major form of resistance became “maroonage,” a strategy in which fugitive enslaved people, or “maroons,” escaped inland to form communities from which they waged a campaign of guerrilla warfare against the Dutch. Stedman himself witnessed the cruel oppression of those enslaved during a campaign against the maroons in 1774. The book was espoused by abolitionists, although Stedman probably supported reform rather than abolition.</p> <p>This engraving depicts an enslaved black man hung alive to a gallows by a single hook through his ribs, a gruesome scene that Stedman recounted from his experience. The brutalized body, along with the skulls and bones on the shore and the haunting ship on the horizon, demonstrate that enslaved lives were dictated by the violent domination of white people over black bodies. Read about another engraving from this series <a href="#">here</a>.</p> <p><strong>Matthew Choi Taitano<br>Princeton Class of 2018</strong></p>
Information
printed December 1, 1792