Lost Letters: Phillis Wheatley and Obour Tanner
In these poems, Jeffers imagines a first accidental meeting of Obour Tanner and Phillis Wheatley, fast friends and frequent correspondents. The two women shared the traumatic experience of enslavement and the perilous Middle Passage, and the challenge of holding on to their identities as African women even as their masters demanded that they build new lives in New England without reference to their pasts. Here, they reflect on the joy of finding chosen sisterhood on the streets of Newport, Rhode Island, a major center of the brutal Atlantic slave trade that brought them both to the shores of North America. This set of poems was filmed inside the Old South Meeting House in honor of their letters, which often concerned religion.
In Context | Primary Sources | In Phillis’s Words | Artist Insights | Further Reading
In Context
Primary Sources
Links to documents and artifacts relating to the moment and events referenced in the poem.
In Phillis’s Words
Excerpts of Phillis Wheatley Peters’s writings that resonate thematically with Jeffers’s poems.
Artist Insights
Further Reading
Links to additional resources.
- Phillis Wheatley on Friendship by Tara Bynum
- The Poems of Phyllis Wheatley edited by Julian D. Mason Jr.
- “Most Affectionately Yours” by Tara Bynum and Alexis Pauline Gumbs
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