Skin Color In Solomon Northup's Twelve Years A Slave

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Solomon Northup’s Twelve Years a Slave, gives a shockingly accurate and detailed account of the common slave’s experiences and hardships in the pre-Civil War South. Northup is the son of an emancipated slave and born a free man, he lives and works in New York where he marries and has two children, he is also a very talented violin player. He is happy and successful up until 1841 when Northup is confronted by two con men offering for him to play the violin in a circus, so he travels with them to Washington D.C only to be drugged, kidnapped, and sold into slavery. For the next twelve years, Northup survives as slave under several different masters, but the bulk of those years is spent under the harsh and cruel ownership of a southern plantation …show more content…

“What difference is there in the color of the soul?” (Northup 86). Northup doesn’t understand why Blacks have to be so different than Whites. He is asking; what is the value of skin color? In biological terms, it 's worth nothing. Skin color doesn’t define how smart you are, or how strong you are, but in the social point of view, it defines community standings, confidence, and in this case, whether you should be treated as human or animal. This matters because many individuals are discriminated against based on race, and has a majorly negative effect on one 's happiness and wellbeing. Skin color is used as a way for Whites to make Blacks feel inferior, it 's a way to establish control and domination, yet in reality, skin color is nothing more than a physical characteristic and under our skin, all of mankind is …show more content…

“How can slavery be described? Perhaps not at all by those who have not experienced it.” - A People 's History of the United States, Howard Zinn. People started to twist the truth around slavery. Slave owners would say that their slaves are well-fed, when infact, the slaves were starving and malnourished. “There may be humane masters, as there certainly are inhumane ones- there may be slaves well-fed, well-clothed, and happy, as there surely are those half-clad, half-starved, and miserable; nevertheless, the institution that tolerates such wrong and inhumanity as I have witnessed, is a cruel, unjust, and barbarous one”(Northup 149). The government tolerates the unfair treatment of slaves, because the government was made up of white men who benefited from owning many slaves themselves. This is very important because there is no limit to how brutally a slave can be treated. A master could beat his slave to death and not even be put on

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