Autobiography Of Fredrick Douglas

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Memory was given to man for some wise purpose. The past is…the mirror in which we may discern the dim outlines of the future and by which we may make them more symmetrical – Fredrick Douglas. Fredrick Douglas’s autobiography is a first- hand account of his transformation from a former slave into one of the most important civil rights activists of the Reconstruction era. His fluid, descriptive narrative on his life as a slave, helped sway the crowds into the emancipation of all slaves. His battle for civil rights help usher in a new breathe into the civil rights movement of his era. What is it about this autobiography that makes you feel disgust about slavery? We will dive into some of the details to find this very reason.
As in most autobiographies, …show more content…

Shining a light on the cruel treatment of slave masters and their overseers. It would seem as though he wanted to ease the readers into the violent topic while at the same time painting a vivid picture.
Fredrick Douglas talks about witnessing his Aunt Hester being whipped for having an interest in another slave. He blamed this on the Masters jealousy and wanting Aunt Hester for himself. Fredrick Douglas relates this to a tie between power and sexual desire. “I expect it will be my turn next”, Fredrick Douglas said in a passage as sort of an omen of what is to come. Slaves who had broken the rules of the plantation were deemed “unmanageable”, and were whipped and sold to slave traders in Baltimore. The slave owners had seen this as an appropriate way to send a warning to other slaves about being …show more content…

The caretakers of the horses were constantly punished and whipped for never meeting the standard of care set by the slave master. Having a thousand slaves meant that some of the slaves never actually met the slave master. Fredrick Douglas recalled a time that the slave master was going around his fields on a horse and stopped a slave to ask them what they thought of the slave master. If the answer was negative then he would remember their name to sell them later on. Slaves who were not loyal were sold quickly in order to keep order among the slaves and to keep them suppressed mentally, physically and

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