BRIDGING THE SILENCE: METAFICTIONAL VOICES AND HISTORICAL AMBIGUITY IN SALLY HEMINGS

Authors

  • Khikmatova Nargiza Ravshanovna Bukhara state university PhD student, n.r.xikmatova@buxdu.uz

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.66345/stj.v4i3/2.5511

Keywords:

Barbara Chase-Riboud; Sally Hemings; Corporeal Metafiction; New Materialism; Historiographic Metafiction; The Archive; Physical Doubling; Postmodernism

Abstract

In order to accomplish narrative reclamation, this essay examines the role of metafictional elements in Barbara Chase-Riboud's 1979 historical novel Sally Hemings. This study investigates the contestability of speculative fiction used to ‘voice’ an enslaved woman whose own perspective was routinely left out of the patriarchal archive. It is based on the theoretical frameworks of Patricia Waugh and Linda Hutcheon. The analysis looks into the moral dangers of portraying a relationship characterized by institutional slavery as a ‘poignant love story’ and examines the reasoning behind Nathan Langdon, the proxy character, as a metafictional device that mediates the white gaze. The findings imply that although Chase-Riboud successfully gives Hemings a human face, her narrative strategies force a critical confrontation with the institutional barriers that continue to filter and mediate the lives of the enslaved in the modern imaginary.

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References

1. Chase-Riboud, B.. Sally Hemings: A Novel. Viking Press. (Chase-Riboud, 1979)

2. Dabney, V.. Virginian's View: The Sally Hemings Myth. (Dabney, 1979)

3. Gordon-Reed, A.. Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy. University of Virginia Press. (1958-, 1997)

4. Hutcheon, L. A Poetics of Postmodernism: History, Theory, Fiction.. (A Poetics of Postmodernism: History, Theory, Fiction, 1988)

5. Lewis, J. E., & Onuf, P. S... Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture. University of Virginia Press.

6. Waugh, P.. Metafiction: The Theory and Practice of Self-Conscious Fiction. Methuen. (Waugh, 1985)

7. Wilentz, G.. The Reconstruction of History in Barbara Chase-Riboud’s Sally Hemings. The Journal of Narrative Technique, 22, 67-79. (Wilentz, 1992)

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Published

2026-03-22

How to Cite

BRIDGING THE SILENCE: METAFICTIONAL VOICES AND HISTORICAL AMBIGUITY IN SALLY HEMINGS. (2026). SCIENCE TIME JOURNAL, 4(3/2), 386-389. https://doi.org/10.66345/stj.v4i3/2.5511
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