Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Frances Anne Kemble's "Journal Of A Residence On A Georgian Plantation" - What Influence Does The Institution Of Slavery Have On The Slaves?. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Frances Kemble will long be remembered as the wealthy white woman who refused to allow skin color to stand in the way of equitable and humane treatment. As the wife of a plantation owner, the historical value of Kemble's journal describes in painful detail the realities she experienced after spending time on the family's Georgian agricultural estate. The larger implications of Kemble's account reflects the psychological, economic, educational, moral and familial foundation of racial discrimination during slavery, effectively illustrating the extent to which blacks suffered gross indignities at the hands of controlling whites. Kemble's journal provides tremendous insight as to how the very institution of slavery influenced every aspect of the slaves' lives. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCKemble.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
color to stand in the way of equitable and humane treatment. As the wife of a plantation owner, the historical value of Kembles (1984) journal describes in painful detail
the realities she experienced after spending time on the familys Georgian agricultural estate. The larger implications of Kembles (1984) account reflects the psychological, economic, educational, moral and familial foundation
of racial discrimination during slavery, effectively illustrating the extent to which blacks suffered gross indignities at the hands of controlling whites. Kembles (1984) journal provides tremendous insight as to
how the very institution of slavery influenced every aspect of the slaves lives. "What can I say or do any more for them? The poor little favors -
the rice, the sugar, the flannel - that they beg for with such eagerness, and receive with such exuberant gratitude, I can, it is true, supply, and words and looks
of pity, and counsel of patience, and such instruction in womanly habits of decency and cleanliness as may enable them to better, in some degree, their own hard lot..." (Kemble,
1984, p. 222). The extent to which the institution of slavery influenced the slaves is both grand and far-reaching; that even the smallest nuance of kindness or understanding Kemble
(1984) displayed was embellished into a lifesaving gesture speaks to the extraordinarily miserable existence the slaves lived at the hands of a man whose wife put her heart and soul
into changing. The fight for freedom was always foremost in the minds of the slaves, although they were often persecuted to an even greater extent for asserting their independence.
Kemble (1984) duly conveys this fact by delving into the pain and suffering that ran rampant at the plantation. For emotional comfort and strength, it was the woman
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