First edition
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Author | Charles R. Johnson |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Historical novel |
Publisher | Atheneum Publishers |
Publication date
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1990 |
ISBN | |
Preceded by | Being and Race |
Followed by | Dreamer: A Novel |
Middle Passage (1990) is a historical novel by Charles R. Johnson about the final voyage of an illegal American slave ship. Set in 1830, it presents a personal and historical perspective of the illegal slave trade in the United States, telling the story of Rutherford Calhoun, a freed slave who unknowingly boards a slave ship bound for Africa in order to escape a forced marriage.
It won the 1990 U.S. National Book Award for Fiction.
The protagonist is Rutherford Calhoun, a freed slave, who flees from New Orleans on a ship called the Republic to escape being blackmailed into marriage by Isadora Bailey, a schoolteacher who convinces Calhoun's creditor, Papa Zeringue, that she will pay Calhoun's debts if he will marry her. After meeting the drunken cook of the Republic while drinking to forget his troubles, Calhoun decides to escape Isadora and Zeringue by stowing away aboard the ship, where he is put to work without pay after he is discovered. The ship travels to Africa to capture members of the Allmuseri tribe to take back to America to sell as slaves. Although an educated man, Calhoun is at first self-absorbed and thus initially unable to grasp the hardships of slave life. During the voyage, Calhoun becomes humbled, learning lessons that teach him to value and respect humanity, which includes identification with his own country, America.
Calhoun discovers that the Allmuseri are not the only cargo on board: the captain, a philosophical but tyrannical man named Falcon, also uses his voyages to plunder cultural artifacts that could be sold to museums, and on this trip he has purchased what he claims to be the Allmuseri's god. The other sailors, already believing the Allmuseri to be sorcerers, begin to worry that their voyage is doomed; when they send down a young man to check out the secret cargo, he returns insane. Shortly after the ship sets back for the States, a violent storm hits, worse than any the sailors have seen. After this, several of the sailors decide to mutiny, but they are preempted when the Allmuseri get the keys to the shackles and take over the ship first. Calhoun convinces the Allmuseri to leave alive the few remaining white sailors in order to get the ship back to Africa, but Falcon commits suicide rather than help them. The first mate, Cringle, tries to steer the ship, but he cannot figure out where in the ocean they are, claiming that since the storm, none of the constellations are where they are supposed to be. During this time, Calhoun takes his turn going down to the cargo hold to feed the creature, who gives him a mystical vision of his life and family that renders him unconscious for three days. When he awakens, he learns that Cringle has since died, leaving only himself, the cook, and several Allmuseri on board the ship, which is rapidly falling apart.