Selfdom in Slavedom: Gustavus Vassa

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From Africa, to Barbados, to Virginia, to a ship that travels the British Empire, if a steady location were the basis of identity, Olaudah Equiano would surely have none. However, he still develops a specific identity throughout his narrative, a striking task as he is ripped away from the family and culture he is born into and then never remains in one place for too long. In contrast to this, Harriet Jacobs develops an identity based largely on the family and community that surround her. Jacobs and her contemporary, Fredrick Douglass, also are influenced by the diverse and bustling cities that develop after American independence. This difference that develops from Equiano’s time of the 18th century to Jacob’s and Douglass’s 19th century is partially determined by the economy changing from the British Empire system before the United States of America gained its independence to the growth without growth of the South, where a booming population remained largely agrarian, rural, and isolated without an integrated market like in the North. Overall, two of the main economic developments from the 18th to 19th century that strongly affect a slave’s identity are the changes from external to internal slave trade and the rise of cities. However, two crucial aspects of a slave’s identity remain the same, despite the drastic economic and social changes. From Equiano to Jacobs to Douglass, each never lose the overwhelming desire and will to become a free individual and we never stop seeing the destruction that slavery has done to the identity of both the self and the community.
Olaudah Equiano was born in 1745, decades before the American Revolution and more than fifty years before Harriet Jacobs (1813). Jacobs’s identity largely revolves arou...

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...acobs, Fredrick Douglass, and Olaudah Equiano are all able to develop their own unique identity. As time progresses and the United States of America develops economically, different facets of the identity are seen. An identity based on family and community becomes more possible with the elimination of the slave trade and in the South instead of the volatile and deadly West Indies. With the growth of cities, slaves, conscious of their condition, have a greater chance of becoming free and fighting for the abolitionist movement. However, no matter these developments, a single theme of defiance and strength is seen throughout all three identities. As long as there is slavery, and no matter the economic developments, slaves share a common identity of not having control over their own lives and bodies and as we see in these stories, struggling to overcome their condition.

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