On a Novel by Caryl Phillips
Phillips, Caryl. Cambridge.
London: Bloomsbury Publishing Ltd., 1991; London: Vintage, 2008.
Toni Morrison’s Beloved
deftly exposes the psychology of enslavement in North America, but it is Dessa Rose by Sherley Anne Williams that
succeeds best in exposing the narratological features of a female slave’s “story,”
namely the verbal strategies she uses to retard the extent to which her story
(herstory vs. history) can be stolen.
Caryl Phillips, however, ought to be valued as much as Williams and
Morrison from the angle of post-colonial witnessing. In his novel Cambridge, he “films” the tragic irony of the metanarrative of the
enslaver and the enslaved, bringing to fiction what Hegel brought to
philosophy.
Morrison, Williams, and Phillips inscribe the space of
slavery in the so-called New World. That
space, or actually what is a remembered space-time continuum, also includes
time-management in Margaret Walker’s Jubilee
and Gayl Jones’s Corregidora. Walker and Jones sharpen views of how novels
on slavery overflow generic boundaries and conventions; their novels are
glosses on the phenomenology of slavery in human histories. The spectacle of shared responsibility
regarding the multi-layered “Other” in the production of identity riddles,
paradoxes, and dilemmas. We gaze on the “Other” as an ancient entity that has
newly migrated from Chaos to Reality. And our gaze establishes proof that we
are looking at nothing.
Phillips’s special contribution to the mimesis of the absurdly
absent is his excellence in dealing with dialogic imagination. He enables language to penetrate slavery’s
dark shadows.
Phillips is meticulous in recovering 19th century
British English in several registers throughout the linked parts of Cambridge:
1) Emily Cartwright’s journal of her visit to her father’s West Indian
plantation is a travelogue that doubles as both a treatise on animal nature and as a “blind”
confessional memoir regarding abolitionist yearnings; 2) the slave Cambridge’s
autobiographical justification of revenge, so resonant of Equiano’s narrative
and Nat Turner’s disputed confession; 3) the feature story by an unnamed
journalist which details Cambridge’s murder of “a person by the name of Brown.”
Brown, the overseer of the estate which belonged to Emily’s father is, one must
guess, the father of the bastard to which the very proper Emily gives
birth. Thus, the newspaper story is a
public deposition for the enlightenment of colonial slave-owners. The narrator’s Prologue and Epilogue frame
the white female and black and white male gendering of story. Phillips uses his excellent mimetic skills to
reveal the twisted psychology and ethics of the always already fallen world
made by the enslaved and the enslavers.
Cambridge is one of the finest examples of the purpose post-colonial
fictions serve.
Jerry W. Ward,
Jr. December 15, 2014
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