During the conversation, Howe debunks a few myths that many believe to be true of piracy. In popular culture, pirate life is portrayed as romantic and alluring. True accounts of piracy, however, prove otherwise. Howe explains, “In one way, for instance, most pirate crews were actually multi-ethnic. If you watch Pirates of the Caribbean, that is not the picture that you would get of a pirate crew, but you would have people who were… French, or who were from West Africa or who were from Spanish holdings in the Caribbean or things like that. There were few examples of self-liberating people who ended up joining pirate crews… and of course there were few historical examples of women disguising themselves as men and going pirating. The most famous examples are Anne Bonny and Mary Read, who were two working class women… they both were in disguise in the same pirate crew that was raiding off of Port Royal, Jamaica… I feel like our picture of Golden Age Piracy tends to be monolithic and the truth of the matter in Golden Age Piracy is much more complex and I think much more interesting, and I explore some of those things in A True Account.”
We have a very romantic picture of pirates. They represent total freedom. They’re the greatest condition of freedom that is available in a time period that is otherwise very rigidly controlled by class.”
Now and then we had a hope that if we lived and were good, God would permit us to be pirates.”
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