Experiencing Slavery Through Equiano's Narrative

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Olaudah Equiano's, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, was such a compelling memoir. From his experience of seeing people of different “complexions”, to being beaten, and then almost suffocating from being forced to live in filth and confinement (Perkins 166). The cruelty Equiano experienced was being hungry but having to watch the whites eat fish and fill themselves full but rather giving the extra fish to the slaves, they would throw the fish back into the ocean (Perkins 166). Equiano's experience is a deeply involved slave narrative that captivates the reader, becoming a writing that is easy to read and helps the reader feel as if he/she is seeing it for themselves. Rip Van Winkle by Washington Irving is a well-written …show more content…

It seemed as though Champlain was planning to take his observations and use it against the Indians. One description Champlain has is “As for weapons, they have only pikes, clubs, bows and arrows. It would seem from their appearance that they have a good disposition, better than those of the north, but they are all in fact of no great worth” (Perkins 25). Much of his writing describes the Indians as nice and helpful but more or less considered beneath him which is bothersome. The captivity of Mary Rowlandson was very detailed but was long, drawn out, and hard to continually read. While it is a great way to get specific information about one tribe of Indians, it also shows Mary's Christian views and how it helped her continue on everyday living as a captive. Her faith in God is what kept her going even after her baby died, “I have thought since of the wonderfull goodness of God to me, in preserving me in the use of my reason and senses, in that distressed time, that I did not use wicked and violent means to end my own miserable life” (Perkins 77). She constantly

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