This content was created by Aleya Washington. The last update was by David Squires.
Manuscript Pages from "The Short Biography of Miss Jane Pittman"
1 2019-12-02T23:05:20+00:00 Aleya Washington bb23f453e4fdb56f291988fc1c3d9006858cec34 4 5 Ernest J. Gaines Center, 5-31 plain 2020-12-04T03:17:26+00:00 David Squires c613f45970ae89ef70516076df94370392b06674This page is referenced by:
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Introduction
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When Ernest J. Gaines published The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman in 1971, it became the first neo-slave narrative authored by an African American writer (Rushdy 6). With emancipation a hundred years past and the Civil Rights Movement coming to an end, the novel came into a world eager to understand the legacies of chattel slavery in the United States. Gaines’s contemporaries would figure the on-going relevance of that traumatic past in various ways. Alex Haley represented the lasting grip of enslavement in a family lineage (Roots 1976). Octavia Butler dramatized it through time travel (Kindred 1979). Most famously, Toni Morrison figured it as a form of haunting (Beloved 1987). Gaines showed readers the closeness of slavery with a single woman, Miss Jane, who left the planation where she was enslaved as an adolescent only to navigate life under Lynch Law, the debt slavery of sharecropping, and Jim Crow segregation. The premise of the novel reminds readers that, a century after President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, they could plausibly still speak with someone reared under the institution of slavery.
Miss Jane’s experience comes to readers through an act of storytelling. She tells her story to a history teacher who records it for posterity, adding an element of what Alaine Locke once called “social document fiction” to Gaines’s historical realism (240). Gaines knew well how storytelling functioned as a form of historical transmission. He participated in it as a child growing up in Louisiana. As an adult, he returned to Pointe Coupee Parish several times in the 1960s and used those visits to talk with the people who still lived in Cherie Quarters on Riverlake Plantation, gather their stories, and take photographs. Gaines began writing Miss Jane’s story in 1968, but not from her perspective. The first draft of the novel was titled “A Short Biography of Miss Jane Pittman” and it began after her death. Her funeral became the occasion for other members of her community to tell stories about her life as a sort of memorial. That idea for a multi-voiced narrative produced a novella-length manuscript. By Gaines’s own account, however, that narrative method grew too complicated. “I thought a single voice, Miss Jane’s, would keep the story in a straight line,” he explained later (“Miss Jane and I” 37).
Miss Jane’s single and singular voice became a point of celebration among critics. (See, for example, Barry Beckhman, “Jane Pittman and Oral Tradition.”) Many considered the authenticity of her voice to be the novel’s great accomplishment, conveying a perspective of American history otherwise occluded. Indeed, only a year after the novel came out, George P. Rawick began publishing his expansive, multi-volume collection of slave narratives under the title The American Slave: A Composite Autobiography. Those volumes included interviews conducted by the Federal Writers Project in the 1930s, some of which Gaines had encountered in an earlier volume titled Lay My Burden Down (Botkin 1945). That reading became an important supplement to Gaines’s field work. Library research helped him develop Miss Jane’s voice and imagine the historical context of her life. By populating his novel with historical events and figures—the Civil War, Reconstruction, the great floods of 1912 and 1927, Booker T. Washington, Huey Long, Joe Louis, Jackie Robinson—Gaines did for fiction what historians and folklorists were doing for American memory: remembering the everyday experience of suffering, survival, and perseverance that marked a century of emancipated life.
Given the novel’s concern for rendering history from unexamined points of view, readers might approach it as a meditation on the question of how the people of Cherie Quarters could achieve freedom. The sharecroppers who lived and worked on Riverlake Plantation in the 1960s made their homes in slave cabins; they labored in the same fields their enslaved ancestors cultivated before them; their toil still benefited white landowners. Those circumstances existed across the Deep South where sharecropping persisted into the late twentieth century. The promise of emancipation hardly appeared actualized. Would the Civil Rights Movement fulfill those promises through social and legal action? The novel offers an equivocal answer. Miss Jane participates in a Civil Rights protest to desegregate Bayonne, but we learn from the novel’s introduction that she lives out the end of her days in the Quarters. And the novel ends with Jimmy’s murder, continuing the pattern of lethal anti-Black violence that begins the novel. If Miss Jane cannot tell a story of ultimate liberation, she can narrate the complicated relationship between emancipation and the push for civil rights. The narrative through line draws a picture of survival under shifting forms of economic exploitation and white supremacy.
The literary archives held at the Ernest J. Gaines Center in Dupré Library document the work Gaines did to represent those historical shifts through Miss Jane’s eyes. The scope of the collections on The Autobiography cover the entire lifecycle of the novel, with materials from what genetic critic Pierre-Marc de Biasi identifies as compositional, prepublishing, publication, and postpublication phases of the novel’s existence (“What Is a Draft?”). The collection begins with a manuscript draft of “The Short Biography” and runs to a set of news clippings related to the CBS television movie adaptation staring Cicely Tyson. That series occupies over a hundred file folders, far more than this project features. Here we have featured archival materials that help illuminate aspects of the novel discussed in the keyword entries. Those seventeen entries make up the heart of this project and provide a synthesis of literary criticism, explication of particular scenes, and an overview of relevant archival holdings. In addition to the keyword entries, we have gathered the archival documents in a series of media galleries that display them in viewer-friendly sequences. The timeline following this introduction features primary materials and events that provide historical context for Miss Jane’s narrative, while the bibliography points readers to useful published materials.
In response to an early draft of the novel, Gaines’s editor at Dial Press, Bill Decker, offered several pages of feedback. He concluded those notes by acknowledging that the editorial process often leaves authors disappointed. “I have to do this,” he wrote, “and even if it makes you mad, I hope it will be a tiny little bit helpful.” We echo his sentiment with our hope that this project proves a tiny little bit helpful to anyone interested in The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman. -
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Miss Jane as Voiceless
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Ernest Gaines silences Miss Jane in a way even though it is her story she is telling.
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When Ernest Gaines began writing The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, he originally wrote it from different perspectives, different voices. Although he revised the original copy so that the story was told through one voice, Miss Jane’s, the story still incorporates different voices. In this handwritten manuscript, he begins the story of Miss Jane Pittman through the eyes of several other characters. The story begins after she is already dead. In this way, Miss Jane is not allowed to tell her own story; it is "they" who sit on the porch who tell her stories for her.
The narrative proceeds under the pretense that it is told by Miss Jane about Miss Jane, but her inner voice is heard the least in the novel. Just like in the manuscript, the novel is seemingly about her life, but the story actually revolves around the lives of others—in particular, the lives of four male characters. In this way it seems that although Gaines revised the book into a woman’s tongue, he did not give her a voice. Gaines utilizes Miss Jane’s voice simply to gender the narrator and place her into the strong black woman trope. Not much would change if the narrator remained omniscient, sexless, or impersonal.
When Ernest Gaines wrote the novel, he chose to set Miss Jane Pittman’s life mostly after slavery. By doing this, he hurries past the horrors of slavery. There is only one scene where he allows for an illumination of the violence of slavery. When Miss Jane Pittman is beaten by the mistress for saying that her name “ain’t no Ticy no more, it’s Miss Jane Brown…and Mr. Brown say catch him and tell him if [she] don’t like it” (9). That moment depicts the violence, however, not in psychological depth. The scene simply states that the mistress hit her and that she “got tired beating [Jane] and told [her] master to beat [Jane] some” (9). That description hints at the extent of the violence by suggesting its duration. We also get a sense of the force of the beating because, by the time the mistress stops, Jane “was already bleeding” (9). Scenes such as this leave readers to infer from the description how Miss Jane experienced the violence and what sort of trauma it inflicted emotionally or psychologically.To make the transmission of Miss Jane Pittman’s story credible, a framing device presents an editor listening to her piece together the story, altering it for clarity and accessibility. Gaines uses the framing device not only to replicate the framing devices often used in slave narratives, but also to mediate between Miss Jane's unwieldy orality and orderly literacy. The editor justifies his intervention by explaining, "There were times when I thought the narrative was taking ridiculous directions" (ix). Although Miss Jane tells her own story, her voice is silenced, regulated. Yet the narrator works hard to maintain her speech type: "I have tried my best to retain Miss Jane's language. Her selection of words; the rhythm of her speech" (ix). Similar to the moment when she is beaten for being an active agent over her own identity, Miss Jane’s character is stripped of agency over her own voice. The story is sifted through and pieced together by the editor.
In this typewritten draft, the editor admits that Miss Jane forgets parts of the story often. Instead of allowing her forgetfulness to be part of the story, the story is completed by others around her. She relinquishes some of the power of her own voice to others so that the story can be complete even if it is not from her perspective. The editor claims that he does not know if she is "doing this purposefully or not." If she is, then she makes a conscious choice to silence herself and regulate her own voice in regards to the story.
This perspective favors the original manuscripts and typescripts that used differing voices, of stories told through their own voices. The story of each of the men that Gaines focuses on would have been more impactful if told through their own tongue and not the eyes of another. Similarly, if Miss Pittman gave more depth to her own experience, rather than foregrounding several men in her life, the novel would hold more significance as the portrayal of a black woman. - 1 2019-11-26T06:01:33+00:00 Manuscript and Typescript Drafts 18 gallery 2020-03-07T18:57:53+00:00