Frederick Douglass Reclamation Of Self Analysis

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When there is ever a conversation about oppression the subject of identity, and how it is lost, is seldom forgotten. From the minute and personal to the grand horrors of slavery an oppressor will always remove one’s sense of self as a way of preventing resistance, for in the sense of self lies dignity. It is this sense of losing one’s identity that is ever present in slave narratives. From The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano written by himself to The Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass also written by himself the goal of the work is indeed to dispel the notion that slavery should ever be acceptable, but so often the vehicle upon which this goal travels is the reclamation of self. In his autobiography Frederick Douglass reclaims this sense of self firstly by learning to read and giving himself intellectual agency, then in the physical confrontation with Mr. Covey he reclaims physical agency, and finally when he eventually escapes he reclaims agency as a human being. It is through this reclamation …show more content…

This can be seen in literature’s two Uncle Toms of Uncle Tom’s by Harriet Beecher Stowe fame. In the original story Uncle Tom is forced to make a difficult moral decision he believes will ultimately be in the best safety of his fellow slaves, but as time progressed and the abolitionist book became a play written for segregationists Uncle Tom became the subservient, weak, submissive lackey of the white majority. The man of principle is made translucent shell. Like an image copied over and over again all that defined what one saw has become an impressionist gradient, hardly a remnant of what it once was. In this the play writes removed the strength of will and humility that made Uncle Tom a mensch, a man one should aspire to be. In the emasculation of this character they removed all power he once had and all he once stood

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