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Paperback Biography of a Runaway Slave Book

ISBN: 1880684187

ISBN13: 9781880684184

Biography of a Runaway Slave

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Fiftieth Anniversary EditionOriginally published in 1966, Miguel Barnet's Biography of a Runaway Slave provides the written history of the life of Esteban Montejo, who lived as a slave, as a fugitive... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

great read

This book gives great insight into a slave's life and his attitudes before and after freedom. He also tells about living in the woods as a runaway. Well worth the money.

REVIEW QUOTES

"...a powerful account of a vanished world...invaluable." --Newsweek"An extraordinary record of a bygone era...Montejo reveals an appealing personality as he talks of women, religion, and politics. His descriptions of the activities and treatment of slaves on the Spanish plantations before and after abolition are fascinating. A rare record of history as it was lived..." --Library Journal"Its contribution to our understanding of Cuban history and national temperament is no less than its immense appeal as a human testament...All the fire and dash of the Cuban character, the refusal ever to cringe or to give up, take on flesh and meaning in the reminiscences of this stubborn veteran." --Times Literary Supplement

a worthy read, some dull parts

some of this book was fascinating...to me. i found the old man's recollections of so many aspects of long-past cuba's rural life just gripping, but even moreso, to have it told, more or less, in his words, just added a special dimension that no other type of book could really create. i felt like i was being led on a journey by a character of such realness that no true "biographer" or fiction writer could approximate it.particularly good parts: his descriptions of the cruelty of cuban slavery, of the cruelty of whites, of his ideas about sex, about certain aspects of the war for independencenow for the bad stuff: some of it, i must admit, just dragged. he was a religious/mystical guy, and all his descriptions of the old religions, though certainly realistic and valid, were just boring to me, and i started skimming. also, in part this book was the recollections of a 105 year old man, and so, while i give such an old man credit for being able to tell a good story (or perhaps the credit is due to the editor), it still reads at point like...an old man's story, and not an old man who has a true gift for story-telling. as for plot, forget it. suspense...think again. drama...no. just the facts, and thank god they're interesting enough on their own.

Masterful reconstruction of the life of a Cuban slave

Miguel Barnet, eduated in Havana at an American school, came to discover his Cuban heritage later in life. His tour-de-force was The Life of a Runaway Slave, the as-told-to-biography of Estaban Montejo, an earthy, candid man who had runaway from the sugar fields and who had fought in Cuba's wars for independence. One thing readers must remember is that Barnet intevriewed Montejo when the latter was 103 years old, in a nursing home, in 1963 when the interviews were started. Oral history is difficult enough and this great time-lag makes the task of the interviewer even more dificult.

(auto)biography of a runaway slave

The actual slave of the Biography of a Runaway Slave is ex Cuban slave Esteban Montejo. Montejo's life story is uniquely interesting because it speaks to life on and off the plantation. Montejo's candid retelling of his life under slavery introduces the reader to details about slavery and slave populations erased in general discussions of slavery. When Montejo recalls the Chinese indentured servants and slaves who distanced themselves from other slaves, the Congolese and the Lucumis and their respective spiritual practices, as well as the fights between the two, the shortage of women that caused men to be with men (as well as communal acceptance of this), the barter system between area whites, non-slaves, and slaves, and the roaming escaped slaves and the free black communities he encounters during his time in the woods he forces the reader to re-examine common notions of slavery. His story offers a nice supplement and/or counter (depending on your own politics) of current literature on slavery (i.e. Brent, Equiano, Douglass, Prince, Blassingame,etc..). My only concern with this text is that it was originally titled autobiography and has since been retitled biography. While this may explain the occassionally abrupt topic changes in the text, I wonder if there is more to it. Even though memory games make autobiographies suspect (ya' know- biased), biographies heighten the concern about the presentation of the material. Yeah,I know everyone has an agenda. You still need to find out what it is to know if you agree or not.(I'm going to start reseaching Barnet and why it is a bio and not an auto anymore.)Nonetheless. . .happy reading because it's a great text.
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