Anna Councill 1st Period Though many authors and movie directors often like to add fictional events and things to their movies and books, it is not the right thing to do in a historical movie or book. Fictional aspects always make the story more interesting and exciting but also inaccurate. That’s why in 12 Years a Slave, mostly everything is historically accurate, although there are always some things that are fictional, not one historical movie will ever be a hundred percent accurate. 12 Years a Slave, this movie shows the brutal servitude, dehumanizing and discrimination that Solomon Northup went through along with plenty others. In one aspect that was proved to be accurate in the movie, 12 Years a Slave was the way this film …show more content…
Most slaves were not freed in America until the Emancipation Proclamation was passed in 1863, but even then there were still slaves in certain places. But in Solomon’s case he had help gaining back his freedom. A white man that helped him work on the same plantation for a wage sent a letter to his family about what his slave name was and where he was. But in many cases slaves were incapable to do this because most slaves didn’t know how to read or write. Solomon had an advantage due to his intelligence from being free-born (History1800s). Eventually he regains freedom due to his slave owner to come and rescue him, he then returns home to his beautiful family. Regaining freedom is accurate and did happen but very rarely according to History …show more content…
Accessed February 19, 2016. http://solomonnorthup.com/. "Escape Plans: Solomon Northup and Twelve Years a Slave | OUPblog." OUPblog Escape Plans Solomon Northup and Twelve Years a Slave Comments. 2014. Accessed February 19, 2016. http://blog.oup.com/2014/01/12-years-a-slave-film-literature-history/. "12 Years a Slave True Story - Real Solomon Northup, Edwin Epps." HistoryvsHollywood.com. Accessed February 19, 2016. http://www.historyvshollywood.com/reelfaces/12-years-a-slave.php. "Solomon Northup." Wikipedia. Accessed February 19, 2016. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon_Northup. Bio.com. Accessed February 19, 2016. http://www.biography.com/people/solomon-northup-21333433#taken-captive. "The Real Story of Solomon Northup, Author of Twelve Years a Slave." About.com Education. Accessed February 19, 2016. http://history1800s.about.com/od/slaveryinamerica/fl/Solomon-Northup-Author-of-Twelve-Years-a-Slave.htm. http://solomonnorthup.com/ http://blog.oup.com/2014/01/12-years-a-slave-film-literature-history/ http://www.historyvshollywood.com/reelfaces/12-years-a-slave.php
In Solomon Northup’s memoir, Twelve Years A Slave, he depicts the lives of African Americans living in the North as extremely painful and unjust. Additionally, they faced many hardships everyday of their lives. For one, they were stripped of their identities, loved ones, and most importantly their freedom. To illustrate this, Northup says, “He denied that I was free, and with an emphatic oath, declared that I came from Georgia” (20). This quote discusses the point in which Northup was kidnapped, and how he was ultimately robbed of his freedom, as well as his identity. Furthermore, not only were his captors cruel and repulsive, so was the way in which they treated African Americans. For instance, Northup states, “…Freeman, out of patience, tore Emily from her mother by main force, the two clinging to each other with all their might” (50). In this example, a mother is being parted from her child despite her cries and supplications, the slave owner
Solomon Northup was one of the few that escaped the grasps of slavery. He wrote his own book, 12 Years a Slave, and even had a movie crea...
In 1841, criminals seduced a free black New Yorker named Solomon Northup into slave territory by the promise of a job. There, they illegally sold him as a slave. When he protested to the slave dealer that he was free, the dealer beat him. He would learn no to assert his freedom, but over the next twelve years he attempted to free himself on several occasions, all of which failed until the last, successful effort.
Free African Americans were at a huge risk of being captured and sold. Many people during the 19th century believed that African Americans could only be slaved, especially, the whites against abolishing slavery. Solomon wasn’t the only free African American that was taken into slavery, he met a free man from Cincinnati who was also taken. The man’s name is Robert, he was with two other men traveling for work, but he didn’t have his papers, so he was taken and sold to Burch.
Born into freedom, Solomon Northup was kidnapped into slavery at the age of 30. With the promise of money and adventure, he was sent to Washington D.C, unknown of what’s about to come. Soon Northup was soon drugged, beaten, and sold into slavery within view of the capital. During 1800’s, about one million African Americans were transported to the Deep South in the domestic slave trade.
Using the pseudonym Linda Brent, Harriet Jacobs wrote Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, to alert Northern white women to the dangers faced by enslaved African American women in the South. The narrative details her experience of slavery, emphasizing the sexual harassment she experienced working in the home of Dr. Flint (Dr. James Norcom).
There were some ups and downs to Solomon’s bondage. Northup met many friends along the years, including Eliza and Patsey. Eliza had been with Solomon since nearly the beginning of his trip, and they shared somewhat similar stories. Unfortunately, Eliza passed away due to grief over her children at Ford’s plantation. William Ford had the kindest heart of any of Solomon’s owners, however, due to the dangers of Mr. John Tibeats, Solomon was sold to Master Edwin Epps. At Epps’ plantation, Solomon met Patsey, “queen of the fields.” Epps was a mean spirited man, however there was some happiness to his plantation: it was the last one Solomon would work at in his twelve years of slavery. Mr. Bass, a Canadian carpenter, helped Solomon out of bondage by writing to Northup’s family in the North. After twelve years of hard labor, scarce food, sleepless nights, and fierce punishments, Solomon Northup was once again a free man.
In his true-life narrative "Twelve Years a Slave," Solomon Northup is a free man who is deceived into a situation that brings about his capture and ultimate misfortune to become a slave in the south. Solomon is a husband and father. Northup writes:
In her essay, “Loopholes of Resistance,” Michelle Burnham argues that “Aunt Marthy’s garret does not offer a retreat from the oppressive conditions of slavery – as, one might argue, the communal life in Aunt Marthy’s house does – so much as it enacts a repetition of them…[Thus] Harriet Jacobs escapes reigning discourses in structures only in the very process of affirming them” (289). In order to support this, one must first agree that Aunt Marthy’s house provides a retreat from slavery. I do not. Burnham seems to view the life inside Aunt Marthy’s house as one outside of and apart from slavery where family structure can exist, the mind can find some rest, comfort can be given, and a sense of peace and humanity can be achieved. In contrast, Burnham views the garret as a physical embodiment of the horrors of slavery, a place where family can only dream about being together, the mind is subjected to psychological warfare, comfort is non-existent, and only the fear and apprehension of inhumanity can be found. It is true that Aunt Marthy’s house paints and entirely different, much less severe, picture of slavery than that of the garret, but still, it is a picture of slavery differing only in that it temporarily masks the harsh realities of slavery whereas the garret openly portrays them. The garret’s close proximity to the house is symbolic of the ever-lurking presence of slavery and its power to break down and destroy families and lives until there is nothing left. Throughout her novel, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Harriet Jacobs presents these and several other structures that suggest a possible retreat from slavery, may appear from the outside to provide such a retreat, but ideally never can. Among these structures are religion, literacy, family, self, and freedom.
No one in today’s society can even come close to the heartache, torment, anguish, and complete misery suffered by women in slavery. Many women endured this agony their entire lives, there only joy being there children and families, who were torn away from them and sold, never to be seen or heard from again.
Django unchained and 12 years a slave would be two examples of a tragic beginning and happy ending. 12 years a slave was based on a true story about a free black man from the south named Solomon Northup. Solomon was kidnapped and sold into slavery in the pre-civil war era. Solomon was the son of an emancipated slave, Northup was born free. He lived, worked, and married in upstate New York, where his family resided. He was a multifaceted laborer and also an accomplished violin player. In 1841 two con men offered him lucrative work playing fiddle in a circus, so he traveled with them to Washington, D.C., where he was drugged, kidnapped, and subsequently sold as a slave into the Red River region of Louisiana. For the next twelve years he survived as the human property of several different slave masters, with the bulk of his bondage and lived under the cruel ownership of a southern planter named Edwin Epps. In January 1853, Northup was finally freed by Northern friends who came to his rescue. He returned home to his family in New York a free
The topic of slavery in the United States has always been controversial, as many people living in the South were supportive of it and many people living in the North were against it. Even though it was abolished by the Civil War before the start of the 20th century, there are still different views on the subject today. Written in 1853, the book Twelve Years a Slave is a first person account of what it was like for Solomon Northup to be taken captive from his free life in the North and sold to a plantation as a slave in the South, and his struggle to regain his freedom. Through writing about themes of namelessness, inhumanity, suffering, distrust, defiance, and the desire for freedom, Northup was able to expose the experiences and realities of slavery.
In Solomon Northup’s narrative, 12 years a slave, he shares a story of the horrors of his past that was a lifelong reality to many African Americans throughout American history. Northup, being a free man of Saratoga, New York, was stripped of his freedom and sold ‘down the river’ to the Bayou Boeuf of Louisiana and was bound to slavery for twelve years. Along with recounting the gruesome hardships and labor that he had to endure, Northup also gives detailed accounts of the lives of fellow slaves that he comes across, primarily, women. Northup’s narrative allows readers to see that the hardships that slave women experienced by far surpassed anything that a slave man could endure. Stripped of their families, beaten relentlessly and forever victims
12 Years a Slave is a very iconic movie about Solomon Northrup and his being kidnapped into slavery. Northrup was a free man, a professional violinist, and a farmer. After being drugged, he was shipped away from his family and forced to work in New Orleans. During his slavery, he was forced to pick cotton and endure many hardships for 12 years. Eventually, he was freed and returned to his family. The people who captured and enslaved him served no punishment for their crimes since blacks were not allowed to sue white people at that time. Solomon was stripped of all his rights not only as a human, but also as an American and was illegally put into slavery for 12 years.
Twelve Years a Slave is based on a true story. This book is a narrative of Solomon Northup. Who is he, and what is his identity is all described in this book. The title of this book, Twelve Years a Slave, explains those twelve years, Northup spent in slavery. He was a citizen of New York. Solomon Northup, the protagonist of the story, is born-free African American on July 1808. He is married to Anne Hampton and had three children: Elizabeth, ten years old; Margaret, eight years old; Alonzo, five years old. Solomon Northup was a free man kidnapped into slavery for twelve years in Washington, D.C at the age of 32. Two men named Brown and Hamilton kidnapped him in 1841, offered him a job in circus and drugged him. Shortly after his escape, he published his memoir to great acclaim and brought legal action against his abductors, though they were never prosecuted. Solomon Northup in Twelve Years a Slave is an interesting character because the author displays him as very intelligent & creative, caring& kind and persistent and hopeful person.