Sab

Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda

Pages

185

Year

1841

Difficulty

Moderate

Themes

slavery, love, social inequality, colonialism, feminism

A mulatto slave named Sab is hopelessly in love with Carlota, his master’s daughter. She is engaged to Enrique Otway, a calculating Englishman who cares more about her dowry than her heart. What follows is not a simple love triangle but a quiet, devastating meditation on who is truly free and who is truly enslaved.

Why Start Here

Sab was published in 1841, a full eleven years before Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin, making it one of the earliest antislavery novels in any language. But Avellaneda’s ambition goes further than protest. She draws a direct parallel between the institution of slavery and the institution of marriage, arguing that both reduce human beings to property. The slave Sab is the most emotionally articulate character in the book, while the supposedly free characters are trapped by greed, convention, and indifference.

Avellaneda wrote the novel in her twenties, drawing on her childhood in Cuba and the colonial world she knew firsthand. The book was so incendiary that copies were seized by customs when they arrived in Havana, and it was not published in Cuba until 1914, seventy-three years after its first edition in Madrid. That long suppression tells you everything about the novel’s power.

What to Expect

A compact Romantic novel set in the Cuban countryside. The prose is lush and emotional in the style of its era, but the underlying argument is sharp and modern. The best English translation, by Nina M. Scott, also includes Avellaneda’s autobiography, which gives valuable context for the novel and is worth reading on its own. No prior knowledge of Cuban history is needed, though you will come away knowing more about colonial society than most history books will tell you.

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