Recasting Africanness: Ignatius Sancho and the Question of Identity

Journal Title: Çankaya University Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences - Year 2019, Vol 13, Issue 1

Abstract

The prejudice against blacks, a designation which in eighteenth-century British context describes all non-white people, including people from India, Africa, and the Caribbean, is what I tag Africanness. Africanness describes the supposed inferiority of black races. It was the predominant ideology in eighteenth-century Britain that blacks are immoral and unrefined people who lack mental abilities. In Letters of the Late Ignatius Sancho, an African, Ignatius Sancho, demonstrates his education, his Christianity, his morality, and many other traits that contradict what most Europeans assumed “Negurs” (128) to be. Caught between identities—African, slave, immigrant, Briton—Sancho represents an insider-outsider observer of British culture and literature. This paper focuses on Sancho’s demonstration of refinement and intelligence as factors that strategically situate him as a man who defines, belies and redefines Africanness to his society, setting the stage for the anti-racism discourse that followed his death.

Authors and Affiliations

Banjo Olaleye

Keywords

Related Articles

Roger L. Nichols

This paper discusses two themes: “Place and belonging, ethnic, cultural and religious minorities,” and “How does literature depict the struggle for recognition”. It does so through an analysis of the actions of the Sauk...

Language in the War-Zone: The Power of Translation in Rajiv Joseph’s Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo

In the backdrop of 9/11, the two subsequent invasions in Afghanistan and Iraq sparked the imagination of British and American playwrights for creating political plays which protest the futility of wars and conflicts. Ben...

The Complexities of Carnival Identities in Earl Lovelace’s The Dragon Can’t Dance

If one were to identify three elements of Caribbean society that are integral to the region’s identity, they would be creole, calypso, and carnival. All three are interrelated but it is the latter, Carnival, that has sho...

Teaching Critical Discourse Analysis in English and French

The present paper studies the importance of teaching Critical Discourse Analysis, and the challenges of teaching the same subject both in English and in French. Following the proposal of a comparative analysis of the US...

Occidentalism as a Strategy for Self-exclusion and Recognition in Mohja Kahf’s The Girl in the Tangerine Scarf

Arab American women’s literature has emerged noticeably in the early years of the 21st century. The social and political atmosphere of post 9/11 America encouraged the growth of such literature and brought it to internat...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP594514
  • DOI -
  • Views 121
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Banjo Olaleye (2019). Recasting Africanness: Ignatius Sancho and the Question of Identity. Çankaya University Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, 13(1), 50-61. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-594514