Frederick Douglass Dehumanization Analysis

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African American author Frederick Douglass wrote an autobiography titled, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. The purpose of this autobiography was to educate the world on the hardships of slavery. Hopefully to gain support for the abolition movement. While writing/ publishing this work Douglass was a part of “American Anti-Slavery Society of 1841”. Throughout his whole life Frederick Douglass, and his people have been silenced. Finally, someone received the opportunity to speak up against slavery.
During slavery, the degrading factor on both slaves and slave owners was “dehumanization”. It played a role that caused both groups lack positive human qualities. The environment that the owners produced symbolized a dictatorship. Where the leader (slave owners) controlled the general population (slaves). Slaves grew up in fear, but were to ignorant to act on it, and if they were to rebel against the owners they would be disciplined physically. Dehumanization and adultery …show more content…

Convey. His intellect began to decline over time, and his own moral begin to get darker and darker. This is the process for slave owners on creating thoughtless slaves. Ideally the slaves will see slavery as life, because that’s what they’re accustomed to. They grew up as slaves so they live their lives as slaves. It’s a learned behavior for them. Early in Douglass’s narrative he states, “My mother and I were separated when I was but an infant-before I knew her as my mother.” (2) Showing how slaves were robbed from their own sense of identity, but Douglass has an ambitious mind-set. Even though the only piece of information he knows about himself is his name and what state he’s from, and growing up without the privilege to get an education he finds the path of self-education. After getting the idea from an owner who wouldn’t let his wife teach Frederick how to read and write. Douglass now figured out the key to his

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