Examining Slavery Portrayal in the 'Dear America' Series

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A Closer Look: The Representation of Slavery in the Dear America Series written by T. Lee Williams is an article that focuses on books within the Dear America series published by Scholastic Books. This series is very popular within school and classroom libraries, especially in social studies classrooms, however Williams wanted to further examine them. He chose four books from the series that related to some aspect of slavery and took place before or during the Civil War. After he completed his studies, he found that many of these books do not portray an accurate vision of slave life, but they do a good enough job for the audience they are writing to.
He found these books to simplify the life of a slave quite drastically. Although this was probably done for a reason, to shield younger students from reading what could be very graphic information, it allows them to get a good enough sense as to how tough life was for those who were enslaved. For example, throughout the books, some main characters served as house slaves, which was very uncommon during the actual event, and were only witnesses of a select amount of beatings of whippings of slaves. He also determined the characters present a large amount of optimism when it came to their freedom. In reality, many wondered if they would ever be free, not when they would be free. There …show more content…

With that, we are able to examine readings and can ask ourselves if this really could have taken place exactly how it is being portrayed. Although the books seem as if they are written as an autobiography or “diary”, they are actually fictional books and should not be used as stand-alone text in a classroom. Even though these books do bring much knowledge to a classroom and allow students to learn about historical events they otherwise may not have, they only provide one insight to the

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