John Jea
John Jea | |
---|---|
Born | c. 1773 |
Died | unknown |
Occupation(s) | Farmer, sailor, preacher |
Notable work | The Life, History, and Unparalleled Sufferings of John Jea, the African Preacher. (1811) |
John Jea (born 1773) was an African-American slave, best known for his 1811 autobiography, The Life, History, and Unparalleled Sufferings of John Jea, the African Preacher.
Life
John Jea was born in Africa in 1773 near Calabar in the Bight of Biafra.[1] He and his family were kidnapped by slave traders; when he was two and a half years old he was sold into slavery in New York City along with his family, where they worked for a Dutch couple, Oliver and Angelika Triebuen. After learning to read the Bible, he was freed and eventually embarked on a journey to Boston, New Orleans, South America, and various European countries, where he worked as a preacher before finally settling in England.
Autobiography
Jea later published his autobiography along with poems, making him one of the first African-American poets to have written an autobiography.[2] This autobiography was largely unknown until it was rediscovered in 1983.[2]
Henry Louis Gates Jr. has argued that Jea's autobiography forms a "missing link" between 18th century slave narratives which tended to focus on spiritual redemption and later 19th century narratives which rhetorically championed the political cause of abolition.[3] Religious themes dominate Jea's autobiography. Indeed, Jea describes his acquisition of literacy as the result of a miraculous visit from an angel, who teaches him to read the Gospel of John. [4] But political themes are mixed together with these religious aspects, and the work consistently argues that slavery is a fundamental injustice in need of abolition. Gates calls Jea's work "the last of the great black ‘sacred’ slave autobiographies." [3]
References
- ^ Chambers, Douglas B. (2005). Murder at Montpelier, Pg. 185
- ^ a b The Signifying Monkey, by Henry Louis Gates, Jr, Oxford University Press, hardcover, page 158
- ^ a b Pioneers of the Black Atlantic, ed. Henry Louis Gates, Jr, Counterpoint Press, page 23.
- ^ The Life, History, and Unparalleled Sufferings of John Jea, the African Preacher.. John Jea, 1811, page 37.
External links
- The Life, History, and Unparalleled Sufferings of John Jea, the African Preacher. Compiled and Written by Himself. Portsea, England: John Jea, 1811.
- 1773 births
- African-American poets
- American male poets
- American people of Nigerian descent
- American slaves
- Black British writers
- Nigerian male poets
- People from Cross River State
- 18th-century Nigerian people
- Nigerian slaves
- Nigerian emigrants to the United States
- Free Negroes
- People who wrote slave narratives
- American autobiographers
- Nigerian autobiographers
- American male non-fiction writers
- Kidnapped Nigerian children