Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglass Rhetorical Analysis Essay

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he is allowing the readers to feel the hope and determination he had felt himself to be physically free. Douglass especially felt this determination when he disappointingly expressed, “…the dark night of slavery closed in upon me; and behold a man turned into a brute!” (38) At this point, the language used by Douglass causes the readers to believe he may never be able to free himself. However, after watching the ships in Chesapeake Bay, Douglass has another important revelation: he has “only one life to lose.” (38) From this point on Douglass is determined to go through with physically freeing himself. He is taking control over his own identity when he exclaims, “You have seen how a man was made a slave; you shall see how a slave was made …show more content…

He navigates life as a constrained slave, shifts into a slave with a freed mind, and is then able to achieve physical freedom, culminating into the freed man he always longed to be. Douglass uses strong imagery and symbolism, as well as rich diction to illustrate the changes he sees in his identity both mentally and physically, personally and generally. Through the discovery of reading and writing, Douglass gained knowledge that allowed him to find himself and break the chains that his slave master had entangled him in. Douglass was free physically from slavery due to the fact that he was free mentally because he took control over his own self. This narrative consistently spoke of the point that the mental need is always more important than the physical goal. This is why Douglass was able to survive his time as a slave and endure all the brutal beatings: his mind was already free and he knew he had control over his own self and own identity. Once he achieved the mental need, the physical goal became reachable to Douglass. When we free ourselves from the labels of others and take control over our own selves, the world becomes ours to conquer—as can be seen in the case of Fredrick

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