Keela, the Outcast Indian Maiden
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| "Keela, the Outcast Indian Maiden" | |
|---|---|
| Short story by Eudora Welty | |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Publication | |
| Publisher | New Directions in Prose & Poetry |
| Publication date | 1940 |
"Keela, the Outcast Indian Maiden" is a short story by Eudora Welty originally appearing in New Directions in Prose & Poetry in 1940, and first collected in A Curtain of Green (1941) by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.[1]
A tiny, club-footed black man, Little Lee Roy, lives with his young children in the countryside. A convoy of trucks carrying the gear for a traveling circus passes by and an employee impulsively kidnaps the crippled man: "[J]ust seen this little deformed nigger man, sittin' on a fence, and just took it. It couldn't help it."[2]
Circus personnel dress Lee Roy in a grotesque costume and makeup and place him in a freak show exhibit promoted as "Keela, the Outcast Indian Maiden." His performance includes killing chickens by biting their heads off and consuming them raw. Steve, a naive 20-year-old white man, is enlisted to act as barker. Lee Roy is instructed to behave as if he were vicious and violent.
In time, a good Samaritan discerns that the show is a fraud; he notifies the authorities and the circus owners are charged. Lee Roy is freed and returns to his children.
Steve visits Lee Roy's home with the circus owner, the latter who faces legal problems for the kidnapping. Lee Roy sits on the porch, but neither white man addresses him, each offering one another self-justifications for their criminality. They hand the Negro some pocket change and depart. That evening, Lee Roy begins to recount "de ole times when I used to be wid de circus" to which his children reply "Hush up, Pappy."[3][4]
Background
Biographer Suzanne Marrs reports that Welty was hired in the summer of 1936 to serve in the New Deal's Works Progress Administration (WPA) as an assistant publicity agent.[5] The 27-year-old Welty, in the course of her often mundane duties around the state of Mississippi, was exposed to the struggles of working people during The Great Depression. Marrs writes:
Whatever the job's frustrations, the WPA sparked at least one piece of fiction. During her travels for the agency she heard "about a little Negro man who was made to eat live chickens" and she came to understand more deeply the grotesque nature of racism.[6]
This degraded freak show performer was the basis for Welty's character Little Lee Roy in "Keela, the Outcast Indian Maiden."[7]
Rejected by Story magazine, the piece was ultimately accepted by New Directions in Prose & Poetry in 1940, becoming "a classic of the short-story genre."[8]