Borealis Press logo
Borealis Press Home | Index by Author | Index by Title | Search | View Cart

Colonial Era

Confederation Era

Modern Era

eBooks

Children

Young Adult

Novels

General Works

Drama

Poetry

Criticism and Biography/Autobiography

Canadian Critical Editions

Journal of Canadian Poetry

Native

Heritage Books of Canada

How Parliament Works

Canadian Parliamentary Handbook

Fiction

Short Stories

Prose

Canadian Writers

Multi-Cultural

Early Canadian Woman Writers

Canadian Native Subjects

History

Medicine

Abuse of Power

Aussie Six

Canadian Critical Edition

Early Canadian Women Writers Series

Greenhouse Kids

Hockey Family

Journal of Canadian Poetry

Mighty Orion

New Canadian Drama

Other Side

Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry

Quickbeam Chronicles

René

Silly Sally

Tales of the Shining Mountains

The Stry-Ker Family Saga

Trudzik


Michael Peterman


Biography

Michael Peterman is Professor Emeritus at Trent. He is the author of five books, and (co)editor of nine others, including two volumes of Moodie letters. His biography of the Irish-Canadian poet and humorist James McCarroll will be published by McGill–Queen´s University Press in the spring of 2018.


Books by Michael Peterman
Mary Prince and Ashton Warner: two slave narratives transcribed by Susanna Moodie

Edited by
Molly Blyth, Michael Peterman


Cover of Mary Prince and Ashton Warner
325 pages,
ISBN: 9781896133591
$19.95 CA



About the Book

In 1830-31, Susanna Strickland transcribed and helped to edit two West Indian slave narratives at the London home of her friend Thomas Pringle, Secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society. Published by Pringle as pamphlets in 1831, the narratives of Mary Prince and of Ashton Warner were used in the struggle to abolish slavery in the British Empire.

The two narratives were also crucial to the evolution of Strickland's creative life after her marriage to John Moodie later that spring and their emigration to Canada in 1832. Susanna Moodie became the author of Roughing It in the Bush (1852), a seminal autobiographical work about settling in Upper Canada that would establish her as one of Canada´s most important early writers.

This critical edition brings the two slave narratives together for the first time, complete with introductions and notes, as well as accounts of their initial reception and critical history. Included are key letters of Pringle to Moodie, and some of their respective 'slavery poetry', as well as material relating to the lawsuits that followed the publication of The History of Mary Prince. The inclusion of The Narrative of Ashton Warner, never before republished, enables important new insights into slavery in Saint Vincent and on the genesis of Mary Prince as well as into their role in Moodie´s own development as a writer.



E-mail:drt@borealispress.com
Post: 8 Mohawk Crescent, Nepean, Ontario, Canada, K2H 7G6
Telephone: (613) 829-0150
Facsimile: (613) 829-7783
Toll Free: (877) 829-9989
Copyright © by Borealis Press Ltd., 2002.
Updated: August 5, 2002

  top   home