The Atlantic

We Mourn for All We Do Not Know

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II am a 63-year-old white woman. Having read some of the Federal Writers’ Project slave narratives in college, I have known about them my entire adult life. And yet I was brought up short by a statistic in Clint Smith’s article: At the time the narratives were compiled, in the mid-1930s, there were more than 100,000 living Americans who had been born into slavery. My mother, born in 1934, is healthy and active at 86. The realizatio­n that her life overlapped even briefly with the lives of so many formerly enslaved people underscore­s Smith’s observatio­n that, “in the scope of human history, slavery was just a few moments ago.” I thank him for the important reminder.

Kathy A. Rogers Whitefish Bay, Wis.

My father, Benjamin A. Botkin, worked for the Federal Writers’ Project as the national folklore editor from 1938 until 1939 and as the chief editor of the writers’ unit from 1939 until 1941, during which time he was highly involved with the slave narratives. In 1942, Dad left the Federal Writers’ Project to become chief of the Archive of American Folk Song at the Library of Congress. At home, in the evenings and on weekends, he worked on a collection of the slave narratives that would become a book called Lay My Burden Down.

In fact, it was something of a family project. By 1942, the slave narratives were on microfilm at the Library of Congress, and Dad would select the stories he wanted to include in his book and bring the film and a film reader home. My mother, who had some secretaria­l training, would spend her free time during the day typing the stories Dad had selected. I was 8 years old, and my brother was 5. After Mother put us to bed, Dad would ask her to help him proofread her typed manuscript. Mother would read the film aloud, including punctuatio­n, and Dad would check her typed copy for errors. So my brother and I would fall asleep listening to these tales, punctuatio­n and all. One of the proudest moments of my life was a few years later, on an evening when Mother was too busy to proofread with Dad and he asked me to do the reading.

Thank you for your excellent article.

Dorothy B. Rosenthal Amherst, Mass.

Clint Smith replies: My response to the narratives was similar to Kathy A. Rogers’s when I looked at my two living grandparen­ts, who are 90 and 81 years old. It is remarkable to consider how many people still alive today are only a generation or two removed from this horrific institutio­n. The realizatio­n is also clarifying, as it helps give us a better sense of the origins of the racial inequality that we see today. Part of what I am always thinking about is how we convey this sense of proximity to a wider public, so that more people understand the current manifestat­ions of racial disparitie­s as originatin­g from

The Federal Writers’ Project slave narratives provide a rare window into Black American heritage, Clint Smith wrote in March.

an institutio­n that some say is no longer relevant. I think a new Federal Writers’ Project, as I argued for at the end of the article, would go a long way toward doing that.

The Dark Secrets of the Earth’s Deep Past

The ancient climates in the geologic record suggest that something catastroph­ic could await us in the future, Peter Brannen wrote in March.

Peter Brannen’s dystopian romp in your March issue is an exciting roller-coaster ride through geologic time. But it goes back only about 50 million years, and it may be too optimistic. Since the start of the Paleozoic era, more than 500 million years ago, excess carbon dioxide is thought to have triggered at least four of the Earth’s mass extinction­s. At humanity’s present rate, we could poison the atmosphere in this way as soon as the 22nd century. Then we all would be on the verge of extinction.

I spent most of my career at the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency. Since 1970, the EPA’S turbulent political history has mirrored the wild geologic history retold by Brannen, if on a far shorter timeline. As much as any other part of our national government, EPA rides a roller coaster up and down and around in circles. Following Inaugurati­on

Day 2021, the federal fun cars seem poised to climb again; the EPA’S excellent profession­als appear to have a mandate to resume and expand their work to prevent climate chaos. But given the stakes, there can be no more political cycling. America and its global partners must address climate change with constancy and continuous improvemen­t. It is probably baked in that we must eventually abandon our port cities and coastal areas as the sea rises. Worse outcomes can still be avoided.

Richard W. Emory Jr., J.D. Boynton Beach, Fla.

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