Life in the Plantations: The Runaways and the Underground Railroad

763 Words2 Pages

In 1860, approximately 4 million enslaved African Americans lived in the South states where slavery was legal. Approximately 2.8 million worked on farms and plantations, and, the great bulk of them, 1.8 million, were to be found on cotton plantations, while the rest were engaged in the cultivation of tobacco, rice and sugar cane . The majority of them were sold to the plantations’ owners at slaves’ auctions, where slave kids also could be found. The first time Django (Jamie Foxx) appears in the film, he comes from a slave’s auction in Greenville.
The plantations’ landlords were also called “planters”, a term used to designate those who held a significant number of slaves, mostly as agricultural labour. There were different categories of planters: large planters (who had more than 50 slaves, and were part of the “Planter elite” or “Planter Aristocracy”) and medium planters (who had an average of 16-50 slaves) . In Django Unchained, two enormous plantations appear (the first one is in Tennessee and the second one in “Candyland”, Chickasaw, Mississippi), and both Spencer “Big Daddy” Benneth (Don Johnson) and Calvin J. Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio) are large planters who own more than one hundred of slaves.
In large plantations there were diverse classes of slaves. The ones that had the hardest work were the field workers (also called field hands), who worked longer than any other kind of slave, from sunrise to sunset, from “can see to can’t see” (although it does not appear in the film, it could be accepted that Django was this kind of slave). Furthermore, in large plantations, some slaves (usually women) worked in the plantation home. They were domestic slaves (house slaves/servants) and they enjoyed better living and work conditions...

... middle of paper ...

...y had a place for living, their quality of life was very poor, and, for this reason, they decided to fight for changing it. Some did not reach the freedom, but those who did, demonstrated that human beings have to be treated equally, not by their skin color. Django is the clear example of that everyone can reach their objectives if they work hard. As slavery was a “dark episode” of the history of the US and it still persists in other countries, people have to seek for justice and liberty and to struggle for everyone’s freedom and rights because all human beings may be free.

Works Cited

FRANKLIN, John Hope, and Alfred A. KNOPF. From Slavery to Freedom: A History of Negro Americans. New York: Knopf, 1975. Pages 142 and 143. http://littledixie.net/Slave%20Housing.htm (liast seen: 8th December 2013). http://www.ushistory.org/us/27b.asp (last seen: 8th December 2013).

Open Document