Someone Knows My Name.pdf Apr 2026

A central theme is the importance of language as a survival tool and a way to maintain humanity. Aminata’s ability to read and write, skills she keeps secret in South Carolina for fear of punishment, becomes her primary means of negotiating freedom.

The novel follows Aminata Diallo, who is abducted from her West African village of Bayo at age eleven. The story unfolds as an elderly Aminata tells her life story in London in 1802, acting as a narrator for the horrors she survived. Her journey takes her from her home to the horrific Middle Passage, into slavery on an indigo plantation in South Carolina, through the chaos of the American Revolution, to the hardships of freedom in Nova Scotia, and ultimately back to Africa before settling in London to aid the abolitionist movement. Key Themes Someone Knows My Name.pdf

This paper explores Someone Knows My Name (also published as The Book of Negroes ), a 2007 historical fiction novel by Lawrence Hill that chronicles the life of Aminata Diallo. The novel, winner of the 2007 Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize and the 2008 Commonwealth Writers' Prize, is a powerful testament to the power of language, the preservation of identity, and the resilience of the human spirit in the face of the brutal transatlantic slave trade. Introduction: The Journey of Aminata Diallo A central theme is the importance of language

'Someone Knows My Name' by Lawrence Hill for Black History Month The story unfolds as an elderly Aminata tells

Aminata’s survival is anchored in her tenacity and her skill as a midwife, a trade she learned from her mother, which gives her a sense of purpose and humanity. Despite the, "theft of both her children and the constant danger of being re-enslaved," she perseveres. She navigates complex relationships with her masters, such as the slave owner Robinson Appleby and the, "Jewish duty inspector," Solomon Lindo, by leveraging her intelligence and literacy. Conclusion

The novel explores how to maintain a sense of self when enslaved. Aminata constantly fights for her identity, refusing to be defined solely by her slave name, "Meena Dee".

The title refers to a historical British military ledger that recorded the names of 3,000 black Loyalists who were granted freedom in Nova Scotia. The act of recording their names is a symbol of their acknowledgment as human beings rather than property. Survival and Resilience