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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In 6 pages, the author gives an analysis of the book 'Narrative in the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave (1845).' This is the story of Frederick Douglass, a former slave. Through this narrative, the humanity of the slave, Douglass, is asserted. The narrative of Frederick Douglass tells of a chattel that was turned into a human being: a person. No source cited.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_PCfdsaa.rtf
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is the story of Frederick Douglass, a former slave. Through this narrative, the humanity of the slave, Douglass, is asserted. The narrative of Frederick Douglass tells of a
chattel that was turned into a human being: a person. What is a slave? A slave is a chattel, a piece of
property. Frederick Douglass was a slave, more than 100 years ago. He was owned by someone else. He was no more than a piece of property to
be bought, sold, and used in the will of his owner. This slave was able to become a former slave. He was able to through off his bondage
of slavery and become more than just a "former slave" he became a famous orator. He also became a minister of the U. S. He was a leader
to his people. From chattel to person was a long road, but Douglass was able to travel that road and travel it well.
Douglass narrative is quite shocking. The world of the antebellum South was one where the chattels suffered terrors daily. With eloquence, Douglass was able to shed light
on the period of slavery in the United States. When one reads of the life of this chattel, he or she is forced to see the total injustice that
was forced upon the slaves because of their having been born Black. A Black was not even considered a person. A Black was not a "someone." Blacks
were things. They were useful in serving a purpose, but that is all they were. An interest in the subject of slavery, per se,
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