Looking for Kunta Kinte: Alex Haley's Roots and African American Genealogies

As the 30th anniversary 2006 edition recalls, Alex Haley’s Roots: The Saga of an American Family was a big popular success: in 1976, the year it was published, “the book sold over one million copies” and in 1977 the miniseries created out of it “was watched by an astonishing 130 million people.” Dav...

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Main Author: Elisa Bordin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of Verona 2014-12-01
Series:Iperstoria
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iperstoria.it/article/view/426
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author Elisa Bordin
author_facet Elisa Bordin
author_sort Elisa Bordin
collection DOAJ
description As the 30th anniversary 2006 edition recalls, Alex Haley’s Roots: The Saga of an American Family was a big popular success: in 1976, the year it was published, “the book sold over one million copies” and in 1977 the miniseries created out of it “was watched by an astonishing 130 million people.” David Chioni Moore reports that the book “was translated into twenty-four languages, and sat atop the New York Times nonfiction bestseller list for more than five months beginning in late November 1976” (6). Roots’s popularity continues in more recent times: in December 2011, BET’s 35th anniversary airing of the miniseries Roots was watched by 4.1 million viewers, testifying to the longevity of Roots’ popular appeal.2 Haley’s family saga starts in 18th - century village of Juffure, in the Gambia, Africa, where his ancestor Kunta Kinte was kidnapped and shipped, together with other African slaves, to the United States. His Virginian master Wallace imposes on him the name Toby, which Kunta resists fiercely to maintain his African and Muslim identity. After four escape attempts and having his foot cut off he accepts his American fate and name and eventually marries Belle, the slave cook, thus going against his original disdain for African American slaves. From this union Kizzy is born, who is sold to master Tom Lea. The latter repeatedly rapes the girl, who consequentially gives birth to Chicken George, the family patriarch who leads the Kintes out of slavery. From this moment on the family line proceeds fast till Simon Alexander Haley, Alex Haley’s father, and ends with Haley’s telling of his researches in Africa, Britain, and the US to trace his family history.
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spelling doaj.art-c6211a69ca604610a39c71501d6eacaa2022-12-21T22:26:51ZengDepartment of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of VeronaIperstoria2281-45822014-12-010410.13136/2281-4582/2014.i4.426342Looking for Kunta Kinte: Alex Haley's Roots and African American GenealogiesElisa BordinAs the 30th anniversary 2006 edition recalls, Alex Haley’s Roots: The Saga of an American Family was a big popular success: in 1976, the year it was published, “the book sold over one million copies” and in 1977 the miniseries created out of it “was watched by an astonishing 130 million people.” David Chioni Moore reports that the book “was translated into twenty-four languages, and sat atop the New York Times nonfiction bestseller list for more than five months beginning in late November 1976” (6). Roots’s popularity continues in more recent times: in December 2011, BET’s 35th anniversary airing of the miniseries Roots was watched by 4.1 million viewers, testifying to the longevity of Roots’ popular appeal.2 Haley’s family saga starts in 18th - century village of Juffure, in the Gambia, Africa, where his ancestor Kunta Kinte was kidnapped and shipped, together with other African slaves, to the United States. His Virginian master Wallace imposes on him the name Toby, which Kunta resists fiercely to maintain his African and Muslim identity. After four escape attempts and having his foot cut off he accepts his American fate and name and eventually marries Belle, the slave cook, thus going against his original disdain for African American slaves. From this union Kizzy is born, who is sold to master Tom Lea. The latter repeatedly rapes the girl, who consequentially gives birth to Chicken George, the family patriarch who leads the Kintes out of slavery. From this moment on the family line proceeds fast till Simon Alexander Haley, Alex Haley’s father, and ends with Haley’s telling of his researches in Africa, Britain, and the US to trace his family history.https://iperstoria.it/article/view/426literatureamerican literatureafrican-americanslaveryalex haley
spellingShingle Elisa Bordin
Looking for Kunta Kinte: Alex Haley's Roots and African American Genealogies
Iperstoria
literature
american literature
african-american
slavery
alex haley
title Looking for Kunta Kinte: Alex Haley's Roots and African American Genealogies
title_full Looking for Kunta Kinte: Alex Haley's Roots and African American Genealogies
title_fullStr Looking for Kunta Kinte: Alex Haley's Roots and African American Genealogies
title_full_unstemmed Looking for Kunta Kinte: Alex Haley's Roots and African American Genealogies
title_short Looking for Kunta Kinte: Alex Haley's Roots and African American Genealogies
title_sort looking for kunta kinte alex haley s roots and african american genealogies
topic literature
american literature
african-american
slavery
alex haley
url https://iperstoria.it/article/view/426
work_keys_str_mv AT elisabordin lookingforkuntakintealexhaleysrootsandafricanamericangenealogies