Summary and Analysis Editor’s Preface

Analysis

David Wilson’s involvement and endorsement of Solomon Northup’s story is brief, but it was crucial to getting 12 Years a Slave accepted publicly during the time when it was published.

Northup’s testimony was damning evidence against the entire system of slavery in practice at that time in the southern United States. Yet, as a black man and former slave, Northup’s accusations of white cruelty would have been subject to great skepticism, even in the North. The “Editor’s Preface” Wilson provided was a preemptive attempt to counter accusations that Northup had simply exaggerated or “made it all up” as fiction. By including this preface, Wilson lent the weight of his reputation as a respected white man, scholar, and editor to Northup’s story, saying in effect that to call Northup a liar was to call Wilson, himself, a liar as well. Additionally, by declaring up front that Northup’s statements were “corroborated by abundant evidence,” Wilson delivered a not-so-subtle legal challenge to would-be opposition. If pro-slavery apologists intended to discredit Northup’s historical record, he warned, then they’d better be ready to address the evidence that Wilson and his abolitionist colleagues had already collected as proof.

The point Wilson seems to be making with both his endorsement and challenge is this: “Solomon Northup is telling the truth.”