Analysis Of Booker T Washington's Up From Slavery

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In the book, “Up From Slavery”, Booker T. Washington explores the liberation of black slaves in the United States and their integration into American society. Washington does this to revolutionize the racial inequality between whites and blacks as well as to assist in jumpstarting the educational and economical injustice that separates these people apart. Although this book was written in 1901, it embodies the old-fashioned southern political policies of the late 19th century, in which blacks lives had been degraded, primarily after the liberation of the slaves in 1865. The central characteristics for this defiance are displayed by the white mans’ stubbornness to assimilate the black man into society. During the Reconstruction era, mobs such as the Ku Klux Klan began lynching blacks and taking the law into their own hands because they were unwilling to acknowledge equal social status to the …show more content…

Washington proposed a novel solution to the black community by integrating education and industrial labor into the Tuskegee Institute. By successfully transforming the racial inequality between whites and blacks, Washington was able to help assimilate African Americans into the southern society and economy. By reading this book, my respect for Washington and appreciation for what he done for the African American community has not only grown, but my perception and understanding of how difficult it is to transform a slave into a functioning person of society is now transparent. Washington has changed my way of thinking because he showed that education and manual labor are the essential ingredients for anyone trying to enter the workforce and make a substantial living. Though many influential people criticize Washington, his ideology and determination set the precedent for education and industrious labor that enable our society to succeed

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