Afro-American Work Songs in a Texas Prison

1996·United States·29 min.
Afro-American Work Songs in a Texas Prison
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The large plantations in the U.S. South were based on West African agricultural models and, with one major difference, the black slaves used worksongs in the plantations exactly as they had used them before they had been taken prisoner and sold to the white men. The difference was this: in Africa the songs were used to time body movements and to give poetic voice to things of interest because people wanted to do their work that way; in the plantations there was added a component of survival. If a man were singled out as working too slowly, he would often be brutally punished. The songs kept everyone together, so no one could be singled out as working more slowly than everyone else.

CinematographyDaniel Seeger
Original titleAfro-American Work Songs in a Texas Prison