Equiano protected the copyright on his initially two-volume book by registering it with the Stationers' Company, and delivered the required nine copies of the book to Stationers' Hall on March 24th, 1789. Subsequent editions added more subscribers, and by the 9th edition in 1794, the list had grown from 311 names to 894 names. (Slavery itself was not legal in England, but businessmen were still allowed to trade slaves.) The author makes clear that such abolition was his primary purpose in crafting the work, and so by this measure, it was a great success.Įquiano published his book through the subscription method, meaning he convinced buyers to purchase copies before it was actually published. It was successful in mobilizing the abolitionist sentiment that would secure the end of the slave trade in England in 1807. The work is now represented in a multitude of literary and historical anthologies, and has garnered significant critical attention in the centuries since its publication. It was published in 1789, at a time when its author was well-known in English abolitionist circles. The first autobiography written by a former slave, Olaudah Equiano's The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano is also one of the most widely-read and well-regarded of the slave narrative genre.
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