Francis Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911)
Contributing Editor: Elizabeth Ammons
Classroom Issues and Strategies
Two primary issues in teaching Harper are: (1) the high-culture aesthetic
in which students have been trained makes it hard for them to appreciate
Harper and find ways to talk about her; (2) most students' ignorance of
nineteenth-century African-American history deprives them of a strong and
meaningful historical context in which to locate Harper's work.
To address the first issue, I ask students to think about the questions
and methods of analysis that they may bring to the study of literature
in the classroom. What do we look for in "good" literature? Their
answers are many but usually involve the following: It should be "interesting"
and deal with "important" ideas, themes, topics. It should be
intellectually challenging. The style should be sophisticated--by which
they mean economical, restrained, and learned without being pretentious.
It should need analysis-- i.e., have many hidden points and many "levels"
of meaning that readers (students) do not see until they get to class.
Then we talk about these criteria: "Interesting" and "important"
by whose standards? Theirs?
All of theirs? Whose, then?
Why
is intellectually hard literature judged better than "easy" literature?
Why is lean, restrained, educated style "better" than fullsome,
emotional, colloquial, or vernacular style (except for keeping professors
employed)?
The point here is to talk about the aesthetic students have been taught
in school to value and to ask these questions: Where does it come from?
Whose interests does it serve (in terms of class, race, ethnic group, and
gender--both now and in the past)? What values does it reflect, morally
and spiritually (intellect is superior to feelings, transmitting tradition
is a primary goal of high-culture literature, etc.)? Thinking about our
own aesthetic assumptions and expectations in these ways proves a good
way of getting us to see that what we probably accept unquestioningly as
"good art" (whether we "like" such art or not) is just
one definition of "good art." We can now ask: What aesthetic
is Harper writing out of? Is hers the aesthetic we have just described,
and is she simply not very good at it, or--at best--only half-way good
at it? Or is she speaking and writing out of a different aesthetic--perhaps
a mix of what we are familiar with plus other things that many or all of
us are not familiar with?
To address the second problem, the historical ignorance that can hamper
students' understanding of Harper, one useful strategy is to assign a few
short reports for students to present in class. The topics will depend
on what selections by Harper one is teaching, and what resources are available,
but might include such things as racist stereotypes of black people in
newspaper cartoons in the nineteenth century; women's resources against
wife-abuse in the nineteenth century; the formation of the WCTU (Women's
Christian Temperance Union); the division between white feminists and black
people created by the fight for the Fifteenth Amendment; the founding of
the National Association of Colored Women. Such reports can give a sense
of the intense climate of controversy out of which Harper wrote and can
involve the students in the process of creating a historical context for
Harper. Also, having students prepare these reports in pairs or small groups
is a good way of spreading the work around, counteracting problems of nervousness
about making presentations, and having them work corporately rather than
individually--which is particularly appropriate for Harper.
Harper, like many other nineteenth-century writers, wrote to be heard,
not just read. Therefore, a good strategy is to have students prepare some
of her work outside of class to deliver in class.
Major Themes, Historical Perspectives, and Personal Issues
Two major themes I emphasize in Harper are, first, her commitment not
to individual psychology, ethics, development, and fulfillment but to the
group. Harper, like
Emerson,
is ever the teacher and preacher, but the philosophy that she comes out
of and lives is not, like his, individualistic--not focused on the self
or Self. It is group-centered. I think that this is one of the most important
points to make about Harper. Therefore I ask my students to think about
this question: Is the classic dominant-culture American schoolroom theme
of the Individual vs. Society relevant to Harper? If so, where and how?
If not (and often it is not), what question(s) about America does Harper
place at the center? If we use her, a black woman, as "the American"--that
is, if we follow her lead and place her at the center rather than at the
margin--what does "America" mean? What dominant theme(s) define
Harper's America?
Second, I emphasize that Harper is a political writer and a propagandist.
Art and politics are not alienated for her but inseparably dependent: art
is not above politics; it is the tool of politics. I ask the class to think
about our customary high-culture disdain for art in the "service"
of politics, our disdain for art as propaganda. Why do we have that disdain?
What art is not political?
Significant Form, Style, or Artistic Conventions
Often Harper writes and speaks in popular forms. I ask the class to
identify the forms and think about how they work. The sermon, the political
stump-speech, melodrama, the ballad, African-American story-telling, and
vernacular verse are among the forms Harper draws on. How do these forms
work? What devices do they rely on (e.g., accessibility rather than abstruseness;
repetition of the familiar; audience response/ recall/participation; deliberate
emotion-stirring, etc.)? We talk about the appropriateness of these characteristics
of form, style, and artistry to Harper's mission of reaching and affecting
large numbers of people, including people not often written for or about
with respect by white writers.
Original Audience
The question of Harper's current audience inevitably comes up in the
discussion of aesthetics. Because we have been taught not to value the
kind of literature she created or to know much about or take seriously
the issues she addressed (group justice as opposed to individual development;
wife abuse and alcoholism in the nineteenth century; voter fraud and corruption;
lynching; divisions between black feminists and white feminists; employment
barriers to middle-class blacks in the nineteenth century; black women
as the definers of women's issues), most of us have not been exposed to
Frances Ellen Harper. Clearly this will continue to change as the authority
for identifying what is good, valuable, and important expands to include
people traditionally excluded from the profession of professor (white women,
people of color). Or will it? I ask how many students in the class plan
to be teachers and scholars.
In her own time Harper was very popular and widely acclaimed, especially
among black people. She was the best-known black poet between
Phillis
Wheatley and
Paul Laurence
Dunbar. "The Two Offers" is probably the first short story
published in the U.S. by any black author. For many years
Iola Leroy
was considered the first novel written by a black American woman. Harper's
public speaking was uniformly praised as brilliant. In light of the gap
between Harper's reputation in her own day and the widespread ignorance
about her today, audience as a social construct-- as something that doesn't
just "happen" but is constructed by identifiable social forces
(economics; the composition of the teaching profession in terms of race,
gender, and class)--and the issue of why we teach the authors we teach
are central to discussion of Harper.
Comparisons, Contrasts, Connections
Many other writers compare well with Harper, but especially other black
women writers in the two
Heath Anthologies:
Harriet
Jacobs,
Sojourner Truth,
Alice Dunbar-Nelson,
and
Pauline Hopkins.
Comparing these writers can give a glimpse of the range of black women
writers' work in the nineteenth century, which was broad. It is very important
to teach more than one or two black women writers before 1900 and to make
comparisons. Otherwise there is a tendency to generalize one author's work
and point of view into "the black woman's" perspective, of which
there was not one but were many. That point--the existence of great difference
and variety as well as common ground-- should be stressed.
Questions for Reading and Discussion/ Approaches to Writing
1. Preparing an oral delivery, as suggested above, is an excellent way
to get "inside" a work. Also a good exercise is to ask the class
to choose one piece and extrapolate from it the aesthetic principles governing
it. Before class they should try to arrive at a statement of what a particular
poem or speech or piece of fiction does--the effect it is designed to have
on the reader/listener--and how it accomplishes that end. Then have them
form small groups and work together to make up and write down "A Brief
Writer's Guide for Young Writers by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper"
to discuss in class.
2. A good assignment for Harper is to ask students to think about her
as a black woman writer. What did each of these three terms mean to her?
How do the three terms clash? How do they cooperate?
Bibliography
Useful discussion can be found in Elizabeth Ammons,
Conflicting Stories:
American Women Writers at the Turn into the Twentieth Century (1991);
Hazel V. Carby,
Reconstructing Womanhood: The Emergence of the Afro-American
Woman Novelist (1987); Claudia Tate,
Domestic Allegories of Political
Desire (1992); Frances Smith Foster,
Written By Herself: Literary
Production by African American Women, 1746-1892 (1993); amd Carla L.
Peterson,
"Doers of the Word": African-Amercican Women Speakers
and Writers in the North (1830-1880) (1995).