Frederick Douglass Weaknesses

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Battling for liberty through physical, mental, and spiritual crises in slavery, Frederick Douglass serves as one of the most significant and influential abolitionists in America’s history. His personal narrative provides an insightful and convincing argument against slavery and its fraudulent religious justifications. The narrative is captivating as it invokes the need to abolish slavery by telling of his struggles from infancy until young adulthood in slavery without directly calling for an abrupt end to the inhumane practice of bondage. Although Douglass did not give exact details of his self-liberation and his narrative contained grammatical and syntax errors, he achieved his purpose of exposing the American slave system and encouraging …show more content…

His work is filled with grammatical errors that often times distract the reader from the strong and essential message of the literature. One of his most fatal flaws is refusal to disclose his escape from slavery. He only briefly mentions his departure and states it was a long and hard journey. He refuses to explain his escape to cause slaveholders to suffer from a lack of knowledge of their weaknesses and inadequacies. He also does not want to prevent the freeing of other slaves by disclosing of their method of escape to their masters. His reasoning is understandable, yet it also takes away from the suspense that was built by waiting for his great escape to freedom. He also abruptly mentions his fiancée once he arrives in New York. The reader does not receive any warning or knowledge about her until their union. He informs the reader that she was a free woman from Baltimore, which raises questions about how they meet and communicated through his life as a slave. Overall, his few confusions and errors do not diminish the effectiveness of his …show more content…

Douglass wrote in a straightforward method yet he showed his passion and excitement is his writing during the times he disagreed with the principles of slavery. The reader is easily able to identify and understand his flaming passion concerning the mistreatment of slaves and the institution of slavery. Although he did not use illustrative materials, his personal sources and quotes of well-known Americans like Patrick Henry, strengthens his argument and further convinces his audience that the idea of slavery is inhumane and thus must be

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