37 pages 1 hour read

Melton Alonza McLaurin

Celia, A Slave

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1991

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Symbols & Motifs

“Celia, a slave”

Celia is often referred to as “Celia, a slave,” which comes from the title used to describe her in the legal documents of her court case.  This title highlights the aspect of her identity that most matters in terms of determining the course of her short life, and the repetition of the phrasing emphasizes her isolation and smallness in the face of the forces against her.  What is necessarily missing from the book is any sense of who Celia was as a person—there are no records that tell us about Celia aside from her bill of sale and the documents and press associated with the legal proceedings against her.  Instead, she is defined, as McLaurin notes, by the reactions of others to her, and these reactions are reactions to her status as “a slave” and to her murder of Newsom, rather than to her as a person.  Even her efforts to speak for herself are hampered by her inability to testify publicly to the abuse she endured and the feelings it engendered.  She is not allowed to account for her actions—even though she describes the situation to her interrogators and lawyers, those accounts are discounted in the courtroom, where they matter the most.