РефератыИностранный языкFrFredrick Douglas Essay Research Paper Adam ConnersAdam

Fredrick Douglas Essay Research Paper Adam ConnersAdam

Fredrick Douglas Essay, Research Paper


Adam Conners


Adam Conners


History


Frederick Douglas


The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave was written


by Frederick


Douglass himself. He was born into slavery in Tuckahoe, Maryland in approximately


1817. He has,


” no accurate knowledge of my age, never having seen any authentic record containing


it” (47). He


became known as an eloquent speaker for the cause of the abolitionists. Having himself


been kept as a


slave until he escaped from Maryland in 1838, he was able to deliver very impassioned


speeches about


the role of the slave holders and the slaves. Many Northerners tried to discredit his tales,


but no one was


ever able to disprove his statements.


Frederick Douglass does offer a biased review of slavery, as he was born into it,


yet even in his


bias he is able to detect and detail the differences in the slave holders cruelty and that to


which he was


subjected. From being whipped and humiliated daily, “a very severe whipping for being


awkward”


(101), to being able to find his own work and save some money, “I was able to command


the highest


wages given to the most experienced calkers” (134), he is able to give the reader a more


true picture of


slavery. His poignant speeches raised the ire of many Northerners, yet many still felt the


slaves deserved


their position in life. Douglass, for his own safety, was urged to travel to England where


he stayed and


spoke until 1847 when he returned to the U.S. to buy his freedom. At that point, he began


to write and


distribute an anti-slavery newspaper called “The North Star”. Not only did he present


news to the slaves,


but it was also highly regarded as a good source of information for those opposed to


slavery.


During the Civil war, Douglass organized two regiments of black soldiers in


Massachusetts to


fight for the North. Before, during and after the war he continued his quest to free all the


slaves. He


became known as a fair and righteous man and was appointed as the U.S. Minister of Haiti


after holding


several government offices.


Frederick Douglass has woven many themes into his narrative, all being tied with a


common


thread of man s inhumanity towards man. Children were uprooted from the arms of their


mothers,


“before the child has reached it s twelfth month, it s mother is taken from it” (48) and sold


to other slave


holders. Brutal whippings occurred for even the smallest imagined offense, “a mere look,


word, or


motion” (118), women were treated as no better than common concubines and the slaves


were forced into


living quarters, “on one common bed cold, damp floor” (55) worse than some of the


farm animals. The


slaves were not allowed even the most meager portion of food, “eight pounds of pork and


one bushel of


corn meal” (54) to last a month. Clothes were scarce and illness was never tolerated. It


was unthinkable


for the slaves to practice any type of religion, hold any gatherings, become literate to any


degree,


“unlawful unsafe, to teach a slave to read” (78) or even make the simple decision of


when to eat and


sleep.


One of the themes that the book dealt with is society and it s handling of slavery


under the guise


of Christianity. Those who professed to being the most Christian i.e., the minister who


lived next door,


was actually the most cruel. Douglass stated adamantly that religion was, “a mere


covering for the most


horrid of crimes, — justifier of barbarity — sanctifier of hateful fraud, —


protection for the slave


>

holder” (117). “Religious slave holders are the worst” (117) because they thought it was


their duty to


“whip his slaves” (118). While being in the community of religious leaders, Douglass was


subjected to the


“meanest most cruel” (117) of acts of one human being towards another. The slaves


were kept down,


belittled and whipped into submission all under the tenets of Christianity. The Rev.


Weeden, Rev.


Hopkins and Mr. Freeland felt it was not only their right to own slaves, but also their God-


given right to


take these human beings and turn them into hard workers. The imagined acts of


transgression and the


punishments mettled out smacked of Puritanism of the 1600 s. If they, as religious


leaders, were the ideal


citizens of society, then the slaves, who were the chaff of the wheat, must be treated as


such. If the slaves


were not whipped daily, how could they ever be saved from all their imagined sins?


Not only are we allowed a chronological view of Frederick Douglass life, we are


also privy to the


growth of his emotional maturity as he explores the value of becoming a free man, “looked


forward safe


to escape too young to go immediately consoled myself with hope” (86). It is the


gradual realization


that the more Douglass is treated fairly, “deep conviction that slavery would not always be


able to hold me


in its foul embrace” (75), the more he wants to be free and the more inhumanly he is


treated, “raised his


musket aim at his standing victim Demby [a slave shot unjustly] was no more


horror flashed


through every soul upon the plantation” (67) the more he accepts his plight as a slave that


opens up his


major theme. He comes to realize that the slaves lose their personality and identity the


more submissive


and down trodden they become. Unable to think of only protecting their survival, they


begin to believe


they are unworthy of being saved.


As they are awarded more freedoms, the slaves begin to realize that what has been


taken from


them is actually their right to have, “a city slave is almost a freeman” (79). Freedom looks


more and more


precious the closer they are to achieving it until it becomes an obsession and they will fight


to the death to


become freemen.


The literary work the Narrative expresses two main views of women, neither of


which are to be


taken as positive values even in the 1800 s. In a very unfavorable light, Douglass tells the


reader that


slave women were expected to work alongside the men doing the same hard, dirty labor or


they were used


to watch the children when they become, “too old for field labor” (48).


In Narrative, Mr. Covey, “buys one slave for a breeder” (105). The men in


Narrative believe


women are only good for sex and they do not hesitate to use them as such. Another


example is that


Frederick s father was, “whispered my master was my father [Captain Anthony]” (49).


The slave


holder was not above satisfying his sexual urges by the usage of black slaves.


The book was easily digested and powerful yet Douglass softened the tone by not


becoming


graphic when he had every right to do so. This was the first publication of the book and it


would be


interesting to see how much “gentler” he was by the third rewrite. Published by the Anti


Slavery


Committee, it was definitely biased against the slave holder but Douglass seemed to write


fairly of his


experiences especially since he was able to relate both good and bad experiences with his


slave owners.


Douglass words sum it up the best, “You have seen how a man was made a slave; you


shall see how a


slave was made a man.” (107)

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: Fredrick Douglas Essay Research Paper Adam ConnersAdam

Слов:1388
Символов:9052
Размер:17.68 Кб.