Dehumanization of Humanity

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Since the Declaration of Independence America has been the land of the free. Every man was born with inalienable rights that could not be separated from their being. When God created the world he made man king of all the animals and plants and America was the first country to realize this. Well, that is unless that man was from African roots. By simply having a different skin color certain men no longer seemed to have that inalienable right to rule over the earth, plants and animals; rather they were seen as animals themselves. The institution of slavery seemed to alienate the inalienable, enslave the world’s rulers, and dehumanize humanity. While most slaves experienced the dehumanization that slavery thrust upon them, every slave experienced it in a unique and individual fashion. For Fredrick Douglass the dehumanization occurred in a physical fashion, whereas Harriet Jacobs’s objectification was through mental oppression.

Fredrick Douglass always was a slave since the day he was born. While his entrapment began in a somewhat mild way with basic chores and tasks being assigned to him, he had the responsibilities of manhood thrust upon him. On the plantation he was just a boy but had the weight of the world on his shoulders and like Atlas could not escape his destiny. As a young child Douglass saw people beat until the blood formed streams that flowed like tributaries in early springtime. Rather than stopping the master from beating the slave, the blood only encouraged the slave. Escaping the plantation is what not only changed Douglass’s life, it saved it. The cruelties that existed on the plantation dehumanized the slaves so much that the murder of one was seen as a mere destruction of property. This point is illustrated in Do...

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...avery caused in different ways. Douglass was treated as a tool and was physically controlled in a way that Jacobs did not have to endure. Jacobs, though, had to suffer emotional control that Fredrick Douglass was able to escape for longer aspects of his life. Slavery was a crippling system to everyone in the country. While these two authors may have been able to finally escape the grasp of the system many others were not and the dehumanization was much worse and crushed any idea of the American dream.

Works Cited

Bois,, Du, Frederick Douglass, and Booker T. Washington. Three African-American Classics Up from Slavery, The Souls of Black Folk and Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. Minneapolis: Dover Publications, 2007. Print.

Jacobs, Harriet. Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl - Literary Touchstone Classic. New York: Prestwick House,, 2006. Print.

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