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Black Cat Abolitionist

Decent Essays

Longing for Liberation: Abolitionists and Women’s Rights in The Black Cat In his short story “The Black Cat”, Edgar Allan Poe constructs an allegory mirroring the struggles of slavery and the abolitionist movement. Wrought with the tribulations of slavery in 1840s, Poe’s short story exemplifies the issues facing the Antebellum United States by representing different participants in the horrors of slavery. Poe’s characters embody the roles of the slave master, the slave, and the abolitionist. Initially, the narrator, or the slave master figure, introduces the audience to his pleasant childhood disposition and love of animals. His temperament reflects society uncorrupted by slavery. Once the narrator feels the effect of slavery—in owning a black …show more content…

Previously untouched by the horrors of slavery, the woman owns the “pets”, or slaves, alongside her husband. As he mistreats the animals, he also begins to mistreat her. As Poe writes, “The moodiness of [the narrator’s] usual temper increased to hatred of all things and all of mankind… and ungovernable outbursts of a fury…[his] uncomplaining wife, alas! was the most usual and most patient of sufferers” (699). Touched by the repercussions of the corruption of slavery, the previously “uncomplaining” and docile wife immediately recognizes the evil in her husband’s attempted murder of another black cat, another slave. As the narrator, or the slave owner, swings an ax to kill the slave, she grabs his hand in an attempt to stop him. He turns on her, driving the ax into her brain. Utilizing diction like “wrath”, “hideous”, and “demonical”, Poe creates a grotesque image of carnage as the slave watches the abolitionist cut down by the oppressive slave owner and the woman beat into silence by the oppressive patriarchy. The slave owner entombs the woman’s body in the cellar of their home. Unbeknownst to the master, the slave remains with the body of the woman reflecting the solidarity between the Woman’s Rights Movement and the slaves. When police come looking for the wife, the slave cries out a “wailing shriek, half of horror and half of triumph...from the throats of the damned in their agony and of the demons that exult in the damnation” (Poe 701). In this moment, the slave embodies the cries of the thousands of slaves and women not only stripped of their rights, but also robbed of their lives by the violence of the

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