During the Great Depression, the Federal Writers' Project engaged
jobless writers and researchers to interview former slaves about their
experiences in bondage. Most of the interviewees were by then in their
eighties and nineties, and their memories were soon to be lost to
history. The effort was a huge success, eventually encompassing more
than two thousand interviews and ten thousand pages of material across
seventeen states. This collection presents the personal narratives of
twenty-eight former Georgia slaves. As editor Andrew Waters notes, the
"two ends of the human perspective--terror and joy" are often evident
within the same interviews, as the ex-slaves tell of the abuses they
endured while they simultaneously yearn for younger, simpler days. The
result is a complex mix of emotions spoken out of a dark past that must
not be forgotten.
Andrew Waters is a writer and former editor. A native North Carolinian,
he graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with
Honors in Creative Writing and received a graduate degree from the
University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He is the executive director
of the Spartanburg Area Conservancy in Spartanburg, SC.