100spillers the opening lines of this essay provide examples—demonstrate the powers of distortion that the dominant community seizes as its unlawful prerogative. Moynihan’s Negro Family then, borrows its narrative energies
from the grid of associations, from the semantic and iconic folds buried deep in the collective past, that come to surround and signify the captive person. Though there is no absolute point of chronological initiation, we might repeat certain familiar impression points that lend shape to the business of dehumanized naming. Expecting to find direct and amplified reference to African women during the opening years of the Trade, the observer is disappointed time and again that this cultural subject is concealed beneath the mighty debris of the itemized account, between the lines of the massive logs of commercial enterprise that overrun the sense of clarity we believed we had gained concerning this collective humiliation. Elizabeth Donnan’s enormous, four-volume documentation becomes a casein point.
Turning
directly to this source, we discover what we had not expected to find-that this aspect of the search is rendered problematic and that observations of afield of manners and its related sociometries are an outgrowth of the industry of the exterior other (Todorov 3), called anthropology later on. The European males who laded and captained these galleys and who policed and corralled these human beings, in hundreds of vessels from Liverpool to Elmina, to Jamaica from the Cayenne Islands, to the ports at Charleston and Salem, and for three centuries of human life, were not curious
about this cargo that bled, packed like so many live sardines among the immovable objects. Such inveterate obscene blindness might be denied, pointblank, as a possibility for
anyone, except that we know it happened.
Donnan’s first volume covers three centuries of European discovery and conquest beginning 50 years before pious
Cristobal, Christum Ferens,
the bearer of Christ, laid claim to what he thought was the Indies From Gomes Eannes de
Azurara’s Chronicle of the Discovery and Conquest of Guinea,
1441-1448” (Donnan 1:18-41), we learn that the Portuguese probably gain the dubious distinction of having introduced black Africans to the European market of servitude. We are also