By Anthony E. Kaye (NHC Fellow, 2015–16) and Gregory P. Downs
New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2024
From the publisher’s description:
In August 1831, a group of enslaved people in Southampton County, Virginia, rose up to fight for their freedom. They attacked the plantations on which their enslavers lived and attempted to march on the county seat of Jerusalem, from which they planned to launch an uprising across the South. After the rebellion was suppressed, well over a hundred people, Black and white, lay dead or were hanged. As news of the revolt spread, it became apparent that it was the idea of a single man: Nat Turner. An enslaved preacher, he was as enigmatic as he was brilliant. He was also something more—a prophet, one who claimed to have received visions from the Spirit urging him to act.
Nat Turner, Black Prophet is the fullest recounting to date of Turner’s uprising, and the first that refuses to tame or overlook his divine visions. Instead, it takes those visions seriously, tracing their emergence from the world of nineteenth-century Methodism, with its revivals, camp meetings, interracial churches, and Black preachers. The rebellion and its aftermath would hasten the end of this world, as Southern states further restricted the personal freedoms of the enslaved, even as the ongoing threat of revolt shaped the country’s politics. With this work of narrative history, the late historian Anthony E. Kaye and his collaborator Gregory P. Downs have given us a new understanding of one of the nineteenth century's most decisive events.
Subjects
History / Enslaved Persons / African American History / Religious Studies / Rebellions / Nat Turner / Virginia / Southern United States /Kaye, Anthony E. (NHC Fellow, 2015–16). Nat Turner, Black Prophet: A Visionary History. By Anthony E. Kaye and Gregory P. Downs. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2024.