Wednesday, March 4, 2015

All Aunt Hagar's Children


All Aunt Hagar's Children
by Edward P. Jones
read: 2015

I couldn't find a master list of parallels between Lost in the City and All Aunt Hagar's Children, so I put this reference together (not exhaustive):

Lost in the CityAll Aunt Hagar's Children
1The Girl Who Raised PigeonsIn the Blink of God's EyeLitC: Robert considers abandoning his daughter after his wife dies in childbirth. AAHC: Ruth finds a baby abandoned in a tree.
2The First DaySpanish In the MorningBoth stories describe a child's first day of school
3The Night Rhonda Ferguson Was KilledResurrecting MethuselahBoth feature a character named Anita, presumably the same woman (with AAHC story coming after). Main characters are both students dealing with death
4Young LionsOld Boys, Old GirlsMain character of both stories is Caesar Matthews, with AAHC story coming after
5The StoreAll Aunt Hagar's ChildrenPenny (grocery store owner) appears in both stories
6An Orange Line Train to BallstonA Poor Guatemalan Dreams of a Downtown in PeruMarvella and her children appear in both stories, with her daughter Avis featured in the AAHC tale
7The Sunday Following Mother's DayRoot WorkerMaddie appears in both stories
8Lost in the CityCommon LawAAHC story takes place earlier, with Lydia a young girl and her mother Cornelia and Georgia about 30
9His Mother's HouseAdam Robinson Acquires Grandparents and a Little SisterA Joyce appears in both stories. Both have a theme of raising children that don't belong to you, and of the destruction of drug culture
10A Butterfly on F StreetThe Devil Swims Across the Anacostia RiverBoth stories reference Mansfield Harper and deal with theme of infidelity
11GospelBlindsidedBurned-down church and Revered Saunders from LIC story mentioned in AAHC
12A New ManA Rich ManElaine Cunningham appears in both stories
13A Dark NightBad NeighborsBeatrice Atwell appears in both stories
14MarieTapestryGeorge Carter records life histories of main characters of both stories

One has to ask: why does Jones do this? From a literary standpoint, I think it adds depth to the characters and the world - they have life outside the 20 pages or so in their stories. Minor characters in one tale become major characters in another. This feeling that minor characters have their own rich, interesting stories to tell is present in Jones' novel The Known World as well. Aside from the literary reasons, there's a sociological / historical reason for Jones to set up the connections he does: the effects of slavery, Reconstruction, and institutional racism have reverberated throughout American history, and the thematic and literal echoes in Jones' tales reinforce those reverberations.

AAHC takes places largely in Washington D.C., but the setting is contrasted to the rural life that African-Americans left behind in the rural south during the migration to urban centers. In Root Worker, for instance, a middle class doctor learns herbal medicine from a "root worker" in the North Carolina town her parents came from. Jones is interested in the tension between Southern roots and modern progress, and AAHC is consumed with it.

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