Slavery Insights: A Comparative Analysis of Dubois and Douglass

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After reading both Laurent Dubois’s Avengers of the new world and The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, both sources appear to educate the modern world on slavery and how their masters empowered them. In the Haitian Revolution, Dubois relied on printed sources and his personal summaries on scholarly research to teach the modern world on slavery. He also talks about how the plantation owners work slave to dead and replace them with new ones for their own interest. Dubois also mentioned on how the slave masters tried to prevent slaves from knowing human rights. On the other hands, a former slave, Frederick Douglass shared his experience in the plantation. Douglass also talks about on how he escaped to freedom and continue to fight for the abolishment of slavery. His personal experience as a slave was used to teach the …show more content…

The primary source here interpret the reality of the story rather than relying on the interpretations by others. Furthermore, once can say that the truth can only be told by the victim itself. And since Douglass was the victim of slavery, he can tell the truth story that Dubois be able to just by relying to others works. When Douglass says, “I may be deemed superstitious, and even egotistical, in regarding this event as a special interposition of divine Providence in my favor. But I should be false to the earliest sentiments of my soul, if I suppressed the opinion. I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of others, rather than to be false, and incur my own abhorrence” (Douglass, 19). There is no such thing to hide the truth when writing to educate the modern world. And since Douglass does not have anything to loose for sharing his personal stories, he can only tell the truth. From the perspective of a twenty-first century Douglass sources appear to be more valuable for learning slavery because he was once a

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