Personal tools
Navigation
Legacies Collection Opens

Running man image from workshop poster

In September 2008 the Project inaugurates a new Legacies collection to explore the continuing influence of abolitionist ideas and culture in US society from the Civil War to the early twentieth century.  The Legacies collection, which features original texts, historical introductions, and video, is co-edited by Holly Kent, Joe Lockard, and Zoe Trodd.
Log in


Forgot your password?
New user?
 
Document Actions

Ida May

by things — last modified 2007-09-14 17:31 2005 by the Antislavery Literature Project

Major antislavery novel by Mary Hayden Green Pike (Boston: Phillips, Sampson and Co., 1854). Digitized by the Antislavery Literature Project.

 

After Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Ida May was one of the best-known and best-selling antislavery novels.  Its author was Mary Hayden Green Pike (1824-1898), a novelist from Eastport, Maine, who used the pseudonym Mary Langdon for this novel.  She notes in the novel’s preface that descriptions of Southern society were based on a period of residence in the South, but very little is known of Pike’s life. There have been no identifiable substantive treatments of Pike’s writing and only rare critical references to Ida May.   See Andrea K. Newlyn, “Undergoing Racial ‘Reassignment’: The Politics of Transraacial Crossing in Sinclair Lewis’s Kingsblood Royal,” Modern Fiction Studies 48 (2002) 4:1041-1074, at 1053; and David Levy, “Racial Stereotypes in Antislavery Fiction,” Phylon 31 (1970) 3:265-279, at 267.

Mary Pike subsequently published two further novels, Caste, A Story of Republican Equality (1856, under the pseudonym Sidney A. Story, Jr.) and Agnes (1858).  The former dealt with racial prejudices in the North; the latter was a romance novel of a woman betrayed, set during the Revolutionary War.  These were less successful than Ida May.

- Joe Lockard