Frederick Douglass Day |
"My beard's bigger than yours" |
David Oyelowo as Prometheus |
Rock-shackled
Prometheus was adopted as the mythical ancestor of all slaves during the
Abolition debates immediately after the
Greek tragedy was first published in English in 1773. The chains that
constrained Prometheus, painted, drawn, engraved and sung by Flaxman, Blake,
Fuseli, Goethe and Shelley, became instant Romantic ‘code’ for the fetters of slavery. A
collection of poems published in 1807 to mark the abolition of actual trading
in slaves in British territories put a picture of Hercules liberating the
shackled Titan on its cover.
The
American Anti-Slavery Almanac for 1844 offers an unmistakable allusion to the
myth through the black slave mother, prone on the ground but shielding her baby
from the onslaught of the aggressive eagle.
Near the patriotic symbol of the Capitol building, the stars and stripes
floating overhead, the American eagle is subversively co-opted as a vicious
raptor.
In
1833, Douglass was rented to the vicious slave-breaker Covey to have his rebel
spirit subdued once and for all. After a spate of severe floggings, Douglass
fought back for two hours and won. Little surprise that the story of Prometheus’
defiance against Zeus was one factor which shaped Douglass’ own account of that
primal showdown in his epochal My
Bondage and My Freedom (1855).
Soon
Aeschylus’ Promethean fetters symbolised not just slavery but any form of
oppression under capitalism. Marx
represented the censorship of his newspaper Die
rheinische Zeitung in 1843 as
a scene from Aeschylus Bound: Marx is chained to his printing press,
tortured by the eagle of Prussian censorship, and comforted by Ocean's daughters (the
chorus in the tragedy) who have become fused with Rhine maidens.
You Have Nothing to Lose but Your Chains |
Five
years later, in London exile, Marx penned with Engels the rousing 23-page
pamphlet destined, for better or worse, to change the world. But at least one of the manifesto's most famous
sentences is a resounding allusion to that Greek tragedy: ‘The
proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world
to win.’
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