Below is a discussion by Yoshie Furuhashi which touches upon the BLACK. ( The Negro , 
in Spanish). 

Anarchists read and learn about your blackness.

CB



>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 10/10/00 05:51PM >>>

Americans are deprived of memory and history.  This is the point that 
Herman Melville makes in _Benito Cereno_ (1856).  Melville 
mercilessly indicts American blindness & obliviousness through his 
portrayal of Captain Amasa Delano.  Here's the crucial dialogue near 
the end of the story:

*****   "You generalize, Don Benito; and mournfully enough.  But the 
past is passed; why moralize upon it?  Forget it.  See, yon bright 
sun has forgotten it all, and the blue sea, and the blue sky; these 
have turned over new leaves."

"Because they have no memory," he [Benito Cereno] dejectedly replied; 
"because they are not human."

"But these mild trades that now fan your cheek, do they not come with 
a human-like healing to you?  Warm friends, steadfast friends are the 
trades."

"With their steadfastness they but waft me to my tomb, _senor_," was 
the foreboding response.

"You are saved," cried Captain Delano, more and more astonished and 
pained; "you are saved: what has cast such a shadow upon you?"

"The Negro."   *****

The cheery absence of memory and history (as well as an inability to 
confront the wages of whiteness), Melville suggests, makes Americans 
(especially of the master class) "not human."

The story works as an allegory of the American assumption of imperial 
hegemony, replacing the declining European empires, especially 
Spanish colonialism symbolized by frail Don Benito (the trades waft 
him to his tomb).  Don Benito cannot put down the slave rebellion led 
by Babo.  He becomes a prisoner of ruthlessly intelligent Babo on the 
slave ship named _The San Dominick_ (an allusion to Haiti, and the 
story is set in 1799).  When Captain Delano comes on board, thinking 
that the ship was in distress & trying to offer succor out of his 
"good nature," Babo has Benito play the Master, and he plays the 
faithful & devoted Slave.  For Babo knows how men like Delano think: 
each time Delano suspects something is amiss (on the _San Dominick_, 
a black boy hits a white boy, labor discipline is lax, and so forth), 
his suspicions are disarmed by "charming" pictures of selfless 
devotion that Babo presents.  Delano thinks himself more 
compassionate than Don Benito and feels slaves are ill used -- 
alternately oppressed & spoiled -- by the tyrannical & temperamental 
Spaniard.  Eventually, with the desperate flight of Don Benito, 
however, Delano realizes that the slave rebellion has overthrown the 
Spanish, cajoles his sailors into attacking the _San Dominick_ with 
the promise of gold, puts down the rebellion, and brings the rebels 
to justice.  The rebel leader Babo gets executed in Lima, but the 
shock of having been overthrown -- even temporarily -- by the slave 
rebellion, and made a slave of a black man, eventually kills Don 
Benito as well.  _Benito Cereno_ uncannily foreshadows developments 
in real history, in which the USA puts down (or coopts, as the case 
may be) anti-colonial struggles -- the Spanish-American War of 1898, 
to take just one example -- and in the process becomes the foremost 
imperial power that reduces the Europeans to subordinate positions, 
all the while believing, like Amasa Delano, that it has & will always 
act out of boundless generosity & compulsion to help peoples in 
distress.

The present stage of "humanitarian" imperialism is, in one sense, a 
resumption of the American self-image temporarily torn asunder by the 
Vietnam War and the anti-war movement.  Americans bring criminals of 
the periphery to justice, for Americans are, you see, the only 
righteous people in the world.

American leftists used to laugh at Amasa Delanos -- oppressors who 
think of themselves as do-gooders -- of the evil empire.  Nowadays, 
American leftists act like Amasa Delano, with one twist -- believing 
that they are saving Babos from Benito Cerenos.  What has not 
changed, however, is the idea that it is Americans who should bring 
criminals of the world to justice.  It goes without saying that this 
self-image makes Americans forget the fact that they are the biggest 
criminals: the only remaining superpower that acts with impunity, for 
there is no one in the world who can bring Americans to justice.

Yoshie

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