The Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglass, An American Slavery?

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During his lifetime, Frederick Douglass has written and published numerous autobiographies. Out of these works, none has had the lasting literary impact on the American literary world as The Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave. From its publication in 1845, just seven years after Douglass’ escape as a slave in Maryland, The Narrative has become one of the most highly acclaimed American autobiographies ever written. The Narrative puts into words a critique of slavery that would leave marks on every reader and impact the world for years to come. Along with describing Douglass’ experience as a slave in vivid detail, The Narrative reveals knowledge as the pathway to freedom, showcases the damaging effects of slavery on slaveholders, and exposes …show more content…

From that day, Douglass makes it his goal to learn as much as he can. Eventually, he learns how to write, a skill that would provide him with his passport to freedom. At this pivotal point in time, “Douglass accepts an ideology of literacy put forth by Mr. Auld, one which rests upon the binary oppositions of slave/master, freedom/enslavement, human/subhuman, literate/illiterate.” (Sisco) Aware that Auld uses literacy as a means to assert power and superiority over his slaves, Douglass plans himself to change his own position by using literacy to assert power over his master. It is the association of literacy with freedom that is one of the most prominent themes in The Narrative. In today’s world, not only do teachers and scholars use The Narrative as a means of learning about slavery in vivid detail, but they use it as a means of inspiring themselves and their students. To many, The Narrative is more about the power of knowledge than the cruel story of slavery. In a chapter called “Knowledge Is Power,” in The Teacher’s and Writer’s Guide to Frederick Douglass, Lorenzo Thomas

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