Oroonoko Sparknotes

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In Oroonoko, Aphra Behn narrates the tale of an African prince who along with his wife were captured and taken to Suriname. The two were later sold as slaves within the British colony (Behn, 20070. Oroonoko has a relatively well educated compare to other slaves and also hails from a superior social background. While in captivity, Oroonoko foments a revolution against his enslavers. However, the revolt is unsuccessful, and Oroonoko is executed. In The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, the author presents an autobiography of his experience as a slave. The book is set during a period when slave trade was rife across the globe (Equiano, 2005). While under the servitude of his owners, Equiano becomes cognizant of the tenets of Christianity and also learns how to write and read as well as marine navigation. Throughout his travels, Equiano witnesses the inhumane treatment that was meted out on slaves. The paper sets out to provide a literary analysis and …show more content…

Taking moral criticism literary critical approach, it is clear that Behn is condemning the slavers and slave owners. The author accomplishes this by providing clear and descriptive details of the horrors and suffering that the slaves underwent under the slave owners. At the end of the book, Oroonoko is tricked and later captured and executed. The author provides a description of the gory and painful execution of Oroonoko with the intention of rousing the emotions of the reader (Behn, 2007). The author attempts to evoke sympathy and empathy towards a man who was captured in his homeland, enslaved and later killed by his owner. However, despite the narrator’s aversion to colonialism and slavery, she exhibits passivity in the face of the revolting treatment of the slaves. This can be an indicator to the powerlessness of her character given that she is a woman a man-controlled

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