In:A Comparative Literary History of Modern Slavery: The Atlantic world and beyond
Edited by Madeleine Dobie, Mads Anders Baggesgaard and Karen-Margrethe Simonsen
[Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages XXXVI] 2024
► pp. 272–288
Chapter 15Scenes of emotion in French early-modern travel writing from the Caribbean
Du Tertre, Mongin, Labat
Published online: 12 December 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/chlel.xxxvi.15kul
https://doi.org/10.1075/chlel.xxxvi.15kul
Abstract
This chapter examines the inclusion of voices of the enslaved in seventeenth-century French travel writing to
the Caribbean by looking at three missionaries writing at different moments of the French settlement and early colonization:
Histoire générale des Antilles habitées par les François (1654 and 1667–1671), written by the Dominican missionary
Jean-Baptiste Du Tertre; Jesuit missionary Jean Mongin’s letters on the evangelization of slaves, written in the 1680s; and Dominican
Jean-Baptiste Labat’s Nouveau voyage aux Isles de l’Amérique, from his stay in Martinique between 1694 and 1706. It
makes the argument that while commerce and profit were unquestionably the main motivations for allowing and sustaining slavery,
travelogues also play on another, emotional register when representing slavery. The aim of the chapter is to interrogate the factors
underpinning this representational strategy and in so doing to draw conclusions about how the techniques and motivations for including
voices changed as slavery was gradually naturalized in the Caribbean.
Article outline
- Du Tertre: Voicing contradictions
- Mongin: The divine voices of the enslaved
- Labat: Controlling speech and emotions
- Concluding remarks
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