Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglass Language Essay

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During the time that slavery prevailed in the United States, slaveowners stripped their slaves of their money, their identity, and their soul. After finally escaping the brutal and inhuman reality of slavery, Douglass’s goal was to expose the evilness of slavery and its corrupted characters. Throughout his memoir The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, he emphasizes the power of language as the key to freedom. Douglass’s first hint to this discovery was from Mrs. Auld. In the beginning, she saw Douglass as her equal and helped him learn how to read and write. However, his at the time master, Hugh Auld, commanded her to stop and what was a caring and kind teacher became a cold and cruel host to Douglass. While he was disheartened he had lost the companionship …show more content…

Whether it be his environment, slave owners, slave hunters, anti-abolitionists, etc., the light to freedom was feeble and often seemed out of sight. Nonetheless, Douglass was strong in the fight against oppression. He believed that he and his other companions “...did more than Patrick Henry, when he resolved upon liberty or death.” He concentrates on the difficulties of escaping slavery and paranoia even when they were technically free. In several cases, slavery was worse than death. However, he stood strong in his position that all men were created equal and demanded the country to live up to this, nothing less. As a strong advocate of the power of education, he demanded for everyone to learn and to open our minds; if not, other will speak up for us and take that right. Slave owners practiced the mental, physical, and emotional dehumanization of slaves to keep them down and never allow them to rebel. Keeping them illiterate would make them lose their sense of communication and quench the power of knowledge so no voice could ever be spoken to break from the misery. With the ability to read and write, one is open to the world and has access to the key to

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