Frederick Douglass Narrative Style

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Frederick Douglass was born in Tuckahoe, Maryland; not sure of his age; does not know who his father is or much about his mother. Separation between children and parents was common among slaves and part of the Master’s plan to keep them in the dark about their identity. He lived on Colonel Edward Lloyd’s Plantation and Mr. Lloyd was Douglass first owner. Capitan Anthony, worked as Lloyd’s overseer; also suspected to be Douglass father, another common situation between slaves and owners. Anthony was cruel and took pleasure in whipping slaves, especially Douglass’s aunt Hester. His narrative style goes back and forth from protagonist-to-distant narrator, this way he can analyze and rationalize settings about slavery and freedom. At seven years …show more content…

Covey is famous for “breaking” slaves and shape them up. The first six months with Covey are extremely difficult, and the second six even more. He survives Covey’s tyranny, but finds his soul broken. During this year Douglass is brutally beaten, he runs away, he is brought back. He confronts Covey and engages in a physical fight. Douglass finds work with a neighbor landowner, Mr. Freeland. Surviving life next to Mr. Covey has given Douglass the last push in search for freedom. Douglass says after his fight with Covey: “You have seen how a man was made a slave; you shall see how a slave was made a man”. He never gives details of his escape; however he does talks about the moment when he saw the opportunity to put his plan in motion. This was short after Hugh Auld let him work at a Baltimore shipyard. He escapes and settles in New Bedford, Massachusetts. He marries Anna Murray. He meets members of the Anti-Slavery Society, one of them Mr. William Garrison. Frederick Douglass ends his narrative remembering his first speech in front of a group of abolitionists, and shares how from that moment on he has been committed to the cause that made him who he …show more content…

To be denied the right of freedom. The words keep sounding in my mind as if someone had pulled me into Frederick Douglass skin and took me with him along the very bumpy ride his life was. I have so many mixed emotions. All of them pointing towards how is it possible at any point in time, for any of these to be consider “natural”, or “rational”. I read the passages more than once as I try to make sure that I understood correctly what I am reading. Douglass soft choice of words in the majority of the book, made it very hard not to get angry, not to get frustrated. I believe he does this on purpose. His mission is not to crate hate towards the slave-owners, but to bring awareness to people of the suffering and injustices of his people. I wonder how is it possible to endure so much hardship and still have the energy to write about it with some type of “kindness” in his sentences. Frederick Douglass has something I do not have for sure, the vision and the necessity to survive in order to achieve his goal. He possess what not many man in today’s world possess; conviction, tenacity, will of power, and faith. All of these under the most horrific circumstances. I loved the book and the way he exposes such a controversial subject. Hundreds of years have passed but still this subject makes some people uncomfortable and unwilling to talk about it. After reading the book I spoke with some extended family born and raised in

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