Black Jack Randall Real Or Fiction

Outlander fans have never seen Black Jack Randall quite like he was in the second-to-last episode of Season 2. Viewers of the Starz series have frequently seen the evil side of Jonathan Wolverton. Jonathan Wolverton Randall, commonly known as Jonathan Randall, Jack Randall, and 'Black Jack', is Frank Randall's direct ancestor and the main antagonist of both the first Season of the Starz 2014 original TV series Outlander and the historical time travel Outlander novel series of the same name by Diana Gabaldon. In the second season of the show, he is just a supporting minor character.

Outlander
AuthorDiana Gabaldon
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesOutlander series
GenreHistorical fiction
Romance
Science fantasy[1]
PublishedJune 1, 1991
PublisherDelacorte Books
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages640
ISBN0385302304
Followed byDragonfly in Amber
Real

Outlander (published in the United Kingdom as Cross Stitch) is the first in a series of eight historical multi-genre novels by Diana Gabaldon. Published in 1991, it focuses on the Second World War-era nurse Claire Randall, who travels through time to 18th century Scotland and finds adventure and romance with the dashing Jamie Fraser. A mix of several genres, the Outlander series has elements of historical fiction, romance, adventure and fantasy. With 25 million copies sold, Outlander is one of the best-selling book series of all time. Outlander won the Romance Writers of America's RITA Award for Best Romance of 1991. A television adaptation of the Outlander series premiered on Starz in the US on August 9, 2014.

Plot summary[edit]

In 1946, after working apart during the Second World War, former British Army nurse Claire Randall and her husband Frank Randall, a history professor, go on a second honeymoon to Inverness, Scotland. Frank conducts research into his family history and Claire goes plant-gathering near standing stones on the hill of Craigh na Dun. Investigating a buzzing noise near the stones, she touches one and faints; upon waking, she encounters Frank's ancestor, Captain Jack Randall. Before Captain Randall can attack her, he is knocked unconscious by a highlander who takes Claire to his clansmen. As the Scots inexpertly attend their injured comrade Jamie, Claire uses her medical skill to set Jamie's dislocated shoulder. The men identify themselves as members of Clan MacKenzie, and Claire eventually concludes that she has traveled into the past. She represents herself as an English widow who is traveling to France to see her family. The Scots do not believe her and take her to Castle Leoch, where Claire searches for a way to return to her own time.

The highlanders of 1743 see Claire as a 'Sassenach', or 'Outlander', ignorant of Gaelic culture. Her medical skills eventually earn their respect; but the clan chieftain, Colum MacKenzie, suspects her of being an English spy. Colum sends her with his brother, Dougal, to collect rents; on the way he also solicits donations for the Jacobites, overseen by Ned Gowan, a lawyer from Edinburgh who is working for the Clan.

When chance again brings her to his attention, Captain Randall tells Dougal to bring Claire to him for questioning. There is suspicion that she is perhaps an English spy. To keep Claire from Randall, Dougal has her wed Jamie, which makes her a Scottish citizen. Torn between her attachment to Jamie and the thought of Frank, Claire tries to return to Craigh na Dun. However, she is captured by Randall's men, requiring Jamie to rescue her. Upon returning to Castle Leoch, Claire continues acting as the official healer, and befriends Geillis Duncan, the wife of a local official, who shares a knowledge of medicine. Eventually Claire and Geillis are charged with witchcraft while Jamie is away, but Jamie returns in time to save Claire. While imprisoned with Geillis, Claire learns that Geillis is part of the plot to restore King James to the Scottish throne along with Dougal and that she is also pregnant with his child. Just before their escape, Claire realizes that Geillis is, like herself, from the future, when she sees a smallpox vaccine scar on her arm. Geillis also sees Claire's scar.

Claire tells Jamie her real story, and he takes her to Craigh na Dun. When he offers her the chance to stay or go, she decides to stay. Jamie takes her to his home of Lallybroch, where they meet Jamie's sister Jenny and her husband, Ian. Though Jamie is still a fugitive from the British, he reclaims his position as Laird of Lallybroch, until one of his tenants betrays him and he is taken to Wentworth Prison. Claire and the MacKenzie clansmen attempt to rescue him, but they fail, and Claire is captured by Randall, who threatens to have her raped. Jamie offers himself in Claire's place, and Randall frees Claire into the woods. Claire tells Randall that she is a witch and tells him the exact day of his death, which she knows from Frank's family history. Thereafter Claire is befriended by Sir Marcus MacRannoch, a former suitor of Jamie's mother. While MacRannoch's men distract Wentworth's guards, the clansmen drive a herd of cattle through the underground halls, trampling a man. They rescue Jamie, who has been assaulted physically and sexually by Randall, and take him to MacRannoch's stronghold, where Claire tends Jamie's wounds. As soon as Jamie is able, they and Jamie's godfather, Murtagh, escape to Saint Anne de Beaupre's monastery in France, where another of Jamie's uncles is abbot. As she and Jamie emerge from a sacred hot spring under the Abbey, Claire reveals that she is pregnant.[2]

Main characters[edit]

  • Claire Beauchamp Randall Fraser: A warm, practical and independent former combat nurse who inadvertently travels back in time to the Scottish Highlands in the mid-18th century. Though married to Frank Randall in the 20th century, she falls for Jamie Fraser in the 18th century. A gifted natural physician and an amateur botanist, Claire is an only child and orphan, raised by her archaeologist uncle.
  • James 'Jamie' MacKenzie Fraser (aka Jamie MacTavish): A strapping young Scottish redhead with a complicated past and disarming sense of humor. Jamie is intelligent, principled, and, by 18th century standards, educated and worldly. He picks up languages very easily, and after initial conflict he falls in love with the mysterious Claire. Though he does not always know what she is doing, Jamie usually trusts Claire.
  • Frank Wolverton Randall: Claire's husband in the 20th century and a history professor with a deep interest in his genealogy and heritage. He worked for MI6 during the Second World War as an intelligence agent.
  • Jonathan Randall (aka 'Black Jack' Randall): The primary villain of the story and Frank Randall's ancestor, a British army officer. According to Jamie, the “Black” refers to the color of his soul. Jack physically resembles his descendant Frank, but has a sadistic sexual obsession with Jamie.
  • Callum (Colum) MacKenzie: Chief of the MacKenzie clan and Jamie's maternal uncle, who shelters Jamie and Claire from the English. He suffers from Toulouse-Lautrec Syndrome.
  • Dougal MacKenzie: Callum's younger Jacobite brother, who leads the clan in battle because his older brother is disabled. It is hinted that he might be the biological father of Callum's son, Hamish. He also took Jamie as a foster son for a time as a teen. Dougal has four daughters with his wife, and a son with Geillis Duncan.
  • Geillis/Geilie Duncan: The wife of the procurator fiscal, who believes that she is a witch, and has knowledge of herbs and plants. Geillis is pregnant with Dougal MacKenzie’s child when imprisoned for witchcraft, which wins her a brief reprieve of her death sentence. She murders her husband, Arthur Duncan. Ultimately Claire realizes that she is a time-traveler from the 1960s.
  • Murtagh Fitzgibbons Fraser: Jamie's godfather, who is taciturn, quiet and brave, and very loyal to Jamie, whom he cares for as a son. At first he does not accept Claire, but changes his mind when he sees how much Jamie loves her.
  • Laoghaire MacKenzie: A young girl of sixteen who is attracted to Jamie. She sends Claire to Geillis Duncan just prior to the witch trial because she 'loves' Jamie and wants him back.

Development and inspiration[edit]

Diana Gabaldon planned to write a historical novel 'for practice', but did not have a specific setting in mind until she happened to watch The War Games, a classic Doctor Who serial, on PBS.[3] Her eye was caught by the character Jamie McCrimmon, a young Scot from 1745 played by actor Frazer Hines.[3] The image of the young man in the kilt stayed with her, and she decided to set her novel in 18th century Scotland.[3] She named her male protagonist 'Jamie' after the Doctor Who character (however, the surname 'Fraser' was not taken from actor Frazer Hines, since the PBS station cut off the programme's credits).[3]

Gabaldon's initial plan was to write a 'straight historical novel', but as she began to write the character of Claire, she says the character 'promptly took over the story and began telling it herself, making smart-ass modern remarks about everything.'[4] Gabaldon decided to make the character a modern woman and determine how she came to be in 18th century Scotland later.[4]

Gabaldon acknowledged a date discrepancy between the American version of the novel, the plot of which begins in 1945, and the British version, which begins in 1946.[5] She explained, 'Reay Tannahill, a Scot who kindly proofread the novel before it was published in the UK, said that 1946 would have been a more accurate representation of conditions as I described them in Scotland.'[5] Gabaldon was able to rework all of the dates for the UK edition, but the American version was too far along in production to change.[5]

Reception and awards[edit]

Publishers Weekly said of Outlander, 'Absorbing and heartwarming, this first novel lavishly evokes the land and lore of Scotland, quickening both with realistic characters and a feisty, likable heroine.'[6] With 25 million copies sold, Outlander is one of the best-selling book series of all time.[7] The novel won the Romance Writers of America's RITA Award for Best Romance of 1991.[8]

Television series[edit]

In June 2013, Starz ordered 16 episodes of a television adaptation, and production began in October 2013 in Scotland.[9] The series premiered in the US on August 9, 2014.[10] It was picked up for a second season on August 15, 2014,[11] and for a third and fourth season on June 1, 2016.[12] On May 9, 2018, Starz renewed the series for a fifth and sixth season.[13]

Other adaptations[edit]

In 2010 Gabaldon adapted the first third of Outlander into The Exile: An Outlander Graphic Novel, illustrated by Hoang Nguyen.[14][15][16] The same year, a 14-song cycle based on Outlander was released under the title Outlander: The Musical.[17][18][19]

References[edit]

  1. ^Reese, Jennifer (November 27, 2007). 'Book Review: Lord John and the Hand of Devils (2007)'. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved October 30, 2013.
  2. ^Gabaldon, Diana (1991). Outlander. New York: Dell. ISBN0-440-21256-1.
  3. ^ abcdGabaldon, Diana. 'FAQ: About the Books: Scotland'. DianaGabaldon.com. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  4. ^ abGabaldon, Diana. 'FAQ: About the Books: Idea'. DianaGabaldon.com. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  5. ^ abcGabaldon, Diana. 'FAQ: About the Books: Discrepancy'. DianaGabaldon.com. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  6. ^'Fiction Book Review: Outlander by Diana Gabaldon'. PublishersWeekly.com. June 3, 1991. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  7. ^Hughes, Sarah (August 24, 2014). 'Outlander: Is this the new Game of Thrones?'. The Independent. Archived from the original on August 15, 2017.
  8. ^'RITA Awards: Past Winners'. Romance Writers of America. Archived from the original on July 14, 2015. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  9. ^Andreeva, Nellie (June 1, 2013). 'Outlander Greenlighted To Series By Starz'. Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  10. ^Ng, Philiana (May 8, 2014). 'Starz's Outlander Gets First Poster, Premiere Date'. The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 14, 2014.
  11. ^Hibberd, James (August 15, 2014). 'Outlander renewed for second season'. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved August 15, 2014.
  12. ^Prudom, Laura (June 1, 2016). 'Outlander Renewed for Seasons 3 and 4'. Variety. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
  13. ^Roots, Kimberly (May 9, 2018). 'Outlander Renewed for Seasons 5 and 6, Plus: See First Season 4 Photos'. TVLine. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  14. ^Brienza, Casey (September 21, 2010). 'The Exile: An Outlander Graphic Novel'. GraphicNovelReporter.com. Archived from the original on September 24, 2014. Retrieved September 16, 2014.
  15. ^'Fiction Book Review: The Exile: An Outlander Graphic Novel'. Publishers Weekly. August 23, 2010. Retrieved September 16, 2014.
  16. ^'Official site: The Exile (graphic novel)'. DianaGabaldon.com. Retrieved September 16, 2014.
  17. ^'PROGRESS! OUTLANDER:The Musical now on Amazon!'. DianaGabaldon.com. September 26, 2010. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  18. ^'Outlander the Musical'. DianaGabaldon.com. October 26, 2013. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  19. ^'Stage Tube: First Listen of Jill Santoriello's Outlander Musical'. BroadwayWorld.com. July 16, 2012. Retrieved July 30, 2014.

External links[edit]

  • 'An Outlander Family Tree (Official)'. Random House. 2014.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Outlander_(novel)&oldid=994327703'

While Jamie works to overcome his post-traumatic stress after being raped by Black Jack Randall in Season 1 of Outlander, another character is now dealing with her own sexual assault. The young Mary Hawkins was raped on Outlander during the April 30 episode 'La Dame Blanche.' Outlander has been fearless in its portrayal of sexual violence and though Mary's rape by an unknown man wasn't given the same weight as Jamie's male-on-male rape, the series still showed how rape has been perceived as shameful for centuries.

Black Jack Randall Real Or Fiction Books

Season 2 of Outlander has moved from the Scottish Highlands to 18th century France. Mary, a young British woman, is staying in France since her uncle has arranged her marriage to an elderly and wealthy French widower. But, Claire and Mary have more connections than just being English ladies in France. If history is not changed by Claire's presence, Mary will actually marry Jack Randall (despite her romantic interest in his younger brother Alex) and birth the direct ancestor of Claire's husband in the 1940s, Frank Randall.

As if being married to Jack Randall isn't terrifying enough, Mary has now also suffered this trauma. After helping Claire at the charity hospital, she was forced to walk to Claire and Jamie's French home with Claire and Murtagh due to a broken carriage wheel. On the walk, the trio was attacked by masked strangers and Mary was raped after her attacker exclaimed that she was a virgin.

The attackers fled when they saw Claire's face and cried out that she was 'la Dame Blanche' and Claire and Murtagh successfully got the passed out Mary to safety at Claire and Jamie's home. Unfortunately, Claire was a bit preoccupied by hers and Jamie's manipulative dinner party plans to give Mary the attention she deserved after the attack. Claire's more modern sensibilities did take a hold of her, though, when she told Jamie that they must alert the authorities about Mary's rape so that she could receive a doctor's care.

Jamie was surprisingly unsympathetic toward this fellow rape survivor. He denied Claire's request to contact the authorities since Mary's uncle and fiancé were at his home and her reputation would be ruined if they knew about the rape. 'If we let it be known she's a maiden no more, no man will ever take her,' Jamie said. 'She'll be a spinster 'til the end of her days.'

Not only were Jamie's words particularly disappointing coming from him, they were also upsetting since Jamie is an 18th century men representing the sentiments of the time. Rather than feeling safe to report a rape, a woman was supposed to be ashamed that she was the victim of a sexual assault and keep it quiet so men would still consider her 'pure' and want to marry her.

To help understand the mindset toward rape and sexual assault in the 1700s, I recommend reading this article about Samuel Farr's Elements of Medical Jurisprudence from the late 1700s. Although I am citing only one chapter from this one book of the time, it is a horrifying look at how rape was perceived. Farr did not even believe the raping of a woman by a man could actually take place, writing, 'For a woman always possesses sufficient power, by the drawing back of her limbs, and the force of her hands, to prevent the insertion of the penis into her body.'

Black Jack Randall Real Or Fiction Story

If that's not bad enough, Farr also considered that women who became pregnant as a consequence of rape must have been excited sexually by the forced sexual act — otherwise a pregnancy would not have occurred. Think it can't get much worse? Farr then details how to examine the vagina to tell if a rape really happened or if a woman was lying. Because apparently if her vagina shows signs of having had too much sex, then she couldn't have possibly been raped.

This is the disturbing atmosphere Jamie is used to, and unfortunately, while female sexual assault victims don't necessarily need to be concerned about ending up as 'spinsters' in 2016, the stigma surrounding rape is still prevalent in our modern culture. According to the Justice Department and as noted by the Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN), 68 percent of sexual assaults are not reported to the police. This number goes up when dealing with rapes occurring on college campuses, which TIME explains is due to factors like victims being ashamed, victims being unsure if the assault constituted as rape, or victims fearing the police won't believe them.

Additionally, consider Todd Akin's claim that 'legitimate' rape doesn't end in pregnancy where he said, 'First of all, from what I understand from doctors, [pregnancy from rape] is really rare ... if it’s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.' Sounds a lot like that article from the 1700s, right? Only it's a statement from 2012 that he later apologized for only to then take that apology back two years later.

While I love Jamie as a character, there are times when his upsetting comments remind me that he is a man of the 18th century and has all of the biases that come with that setting. Even as a survivor of rape himself, he let the social constructs of the time dictate how Mary should be treated after being raped. Clearly, letting her rest after the traumatic experience wasn't enough treatment since when she awoke and saw her love Alex Randall by her bed, it triggered the recent abuse for her and she fled the bedroom. As Alex tried to calm her down, it only exacerbated the problem as a man being physically dominant over her likely brought back the horrors of the assault.

I anticipate that the aftermath of Mary's rape will not get as much screen time as Jamie's and, though that might make sense since Jamie is a main character, it's also upsetting, because Mary's story of recovery should be told too. Whether it's in the world of Outlander or in the world we live in today, rape against any gender is not acceptable and never the victim's fault. And we must continue to make it clear that victims of sexual assault should never be ashamed about what happened to them — no matter what time period the assault happened in.

Images: Starz (3)