102spillers out, this collective self uncovers the means by which to subjugate the foreign code of conscience whose most easily remarkable and irremediable difference is perceived in skin color. By the time of De Azurara’s mid-fifteenth century narrative and a century and a half before Shakespeare’s old black ram of an Othello
“tups” that white ewe of a Desdemona, the magic of skin color is already installed as a decisive factor inhuman dealings.
In De Azurara’s narrative, we observe males looking at other males, as female is subsumed here under the general category of estrangement. Few places in these excerpts carve out a distinct female space, though there are moments of portrayal that perceive female captives in the implications of socio-cultural function. When the field of captives (referred to above)
is divided among the spoilers, no heed is paid to relations, as fathers are separated from sons, husbands from wives, brothers from sisters and brothers, mothers from children—male and female. It seems clear that the political program of European Christianity promotes this hierarchical view among
males, although it remains puzzling to us exactly how this version of Christianity transforms the pagan also into the ugly It appears that human beings came up with degrees of fair and then the hideous
in its overtones of bestiality, as the opposite of fair all by themselves, without stage direction, even though there is the curious and blazing exception of Nietzsche’s Socrates, who was Athens’s ugliest and wisest and best citizen. The intimate choreography that the Portuguese narrator sets going between the faithless and the ugly transforms a partnership of dancers into a single figure. Once the faithless indiscriminate of the three stops of Portuguese skin color, are transported to Europe, they become an
altered human factor And so their lot was now quite
contrary to what it had been, since before they had lived in perdition of soul and body of their souls, in that they were yet pagans, without the clearness and the light of the Holy Faith and of their bodies, in that they lived like beasts, without any custom of reasonable beings—for they had no knowledge of bread and wine, and they were
without covering of clothes, or the lodgment