Juanita: A Romance of Real Life in Cuba Fifty Years Ago

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University of Virginia Press, 2000 - Fiction - 222 pages

Originally published in 1887 and never before reprinted, Juanita is a historical romance based on Mary Peabody Mann's experience of living on a Cuban slaveholder's plantation from 1833 to 1835. The novel centers on the extended visit of helen Wentworth, a New England teacher, to a childhood friend's plantation, where she witnesses African slaves' arrivals and their sale and gross mistreatment at the hands of coffee and sugar planters. Juanita is a beautiful mulatta slave with whom the plantation owner's son falls in love. Extending the tradition of Gothic fiction in the Americas, Mann's novel raises questions about the relation of slavery in the Caribbean to that in the United States, and between romance and race, adding an important element to our understanding of nineteenth-century American literature. Patricia M. Ard's introductory essay places Mann- with her literary gifts and intellectual connections to Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ralph Waldo Emmerson, and Henry David Thoreau- at the very center of the American Renaissance and American reform movements.

 

Contents

Acknowledgments
ix
Selected Bibliography
xxxix
Brief Chronologies of Cuban and United States
xlv
Africa
3
The Marchioness
47
The Dinner
56
The Drive
65
Juanita
76
La Modestia
127
Parted Families
146
Don Andres
158
Tulita
164
The Flight
179
Sewing
181
Deception
188
Consequences
192

The ChickenHouse
86
The Americans
93
Fanchon
100
The New Years Ball
104
CockFighting
111
The Cactus The Sleeve of Wind
113
Pedro and Dolores
119
Doņa Josefa
125
Repentance
195
Homeward Bound
200
Dissipation
205
The Return
210
Cuba
216
EXPLANATORY NOTE by Elizabeth P Peabody 223
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