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Oroonoko: or the Royal Slave

Print
1807 (printed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Oroonoko: or the Royal Slave was written by Aphra Behn and published in 1688. The novel tells the story of a tragic love affair between Oroonoko, an African prince, and Imoinda, the daughter of an African general. In the story the lovers are forced into slavery and transported to Surinam in the West Indies, then an English colony based on sugarcane plantations. The lovers make a death pact in preference to a life lived under slavery. Oroonoko kills Imoinda before suffering an inhumane death in a public execution.

Behn’s novel was not immediately successful but a 1695 adaptation for stage by Thomas Southerne brought the story to a wider audience and was a great success. After the play was staged, a new edition of the novel appeared and it remained in print throughout the 18th century. The adaptation was generally faithful to the novel, with one significant exception: it makes Imoinda white instead of black, therefore the male lead would perform in blackface to a white heroine. This print, an illustration to act v, scene iii of Southerne’s stage adaptation, presents Oroonoko in the guise of the ‘noble savage’, with European facial features and wearing elaborate dress including a feathered turban.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Titles
  • Oroonoko: or the Royal Slave
  • Death is security for all our fears
Materials and techniques
Engraving on paper
Brief description
Print, illustration to the 1695 stage adaptation of Aphra Behn's 'Oroonoko: or the Royal Slave'
Physical description
Printed illustration to stage adaptation of Aphra Behn's 'Oroonoko: or the Royal Slave', showing, in central medallion, Oroonoko, in the guise of 'noble savage', pointing (a white) Imoinda to a dead body laying on the ground. Below the medallion is drapery with script on (see inscription) and above an arrangement including a serpent, a shield, a crown, a sword, shackles and, possibly, sugar cane
Dimensions
  • Height: 13cm
  • Width: 8.2cm
Marks and inscriptions
(OROONOKO, Act V., Scene III. Oroo: Death is security for all our fears. Printed for C. Cooke April II 1807. Painted by Hamilton R.A. Engraved by Smith A.E.)
Object history
Probably an illustration to a reprint of the stage adaptation by Thomas Southerne, 'Oroonoko, Adapted for Theatrical Representation as performed at the Theatres-Royal, Drury-Lane and Covent Garden. Regulated from the Prompt-Books, by Permission of the Managers', 1791. The depicted scene is act v, scene iii.

This was published as an illustration to Cooke's 'British Theatre'.
Historical context
Blackface is a style of theatrical makeup that originated in the United States around 1830 and which was based on racist stereotypes of African Americans. It was most commonly used in the minstrel performance tradition. White performers (and sometimes black) used burnt cork, greasepaint or shoe polish to blacken their skin and exaggerate their lips. The look was completed with ‘woolly’ wigs, gloves, tailcoats and/or ragged clothes. Blackface was a performance tradition in American theatre for over 100 years and was also popular overseas. Stereotypes embodied in the stock characters of blackface minstrelsy played a significant role in cementing and proliferating racist attitudes.
Subjects depicted
Literary referenceOroonoko: or the Royal Slave by Aphra Behn
Summary
Oroonoko: or the Royal Slave was written by Aphra Behn and published in 1688. The novel tells the story of a tragic love affair between Oroonoko, an African prince, and Imoinda, the daughter of an African general. In the story the lovers are forced into slavery and transported to Surinam in the West Indies, then an English colony based on sugarcane plantations. The lovers make a death pact in preference to a life lived under slavery. Oroonoko kills Imoinda before suffering an inhumane death in a public execution.

Behn’s novel was not immediately successful but a 1695 adaptation for stage by Thomas Southerne brought the story to a wider audience and was a great success. After the play was staged, a new edition of the novel appeared and it remained in print throughout the 18th century. The adaptation was generally faithful to the novel, with one significant exception: it makes Imoinda white instead of black, therefore the male lead would perform in blackface to a white heroine. This print, an illustration to act v, scene iii of Southerne’s stage adaptation, presents Oroonoko in the guise of the ‘noble savage’, with European facial features and wearing elaborate dress including a feathered turban.
Collection
Accession number
28293:31

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Record createdJuly 3, 2007
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