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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
2.5 pages in length. As much as the slave narrative of such extraordinary people as Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs became an American staple in the nineteenth century, the precursor to this particular type of literary expression was chartered by Olaudah Equiano, an African who, at age ten, was kidnapped to first serve as a British naval officer's slave and then upon various slave ships. Earning enough to ultimately buy his freedom in 1766, Equiano dedicated the rest of his life to becoming an outspoken and highly respected advocate of England's antislavery movement. No additional sources cited.
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2 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCEquia.rtf
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century, the precursor to this particular type of literary expression was chartered by Olaudah Equiano, an African who, at age ten, was kidnapped to first serve as a British naval
officers slave and then upon various slave ships. Earning enough to ultimately buy his freedom in 1766, Equiano dedicated the rest of his life to becoming an outspoken and
highly respected advocate of Englands antislavery movement. The historical significance is that not only was the narrative a way for oppressed slaves like
Equiano to cleanse their souls of their miserable experiences, but it also served as a vehicle to educate the masses. Equianos narratives were no different in that respect, quickly
becoming a metaphor of divine intervention that regularly brought together the parallelism between Israelites and slaves, pouring out his heart and soul into every word and establishing an unprecedented introspective
element to his tales. Recounting the many instances of humiliation, suffering and torment, Equiano effectively draws the reader into the oppressive world of European slavery. "...I now offer
this edition of my Narrative to the candid reader, and to the friends of humanity, hoping it may still be the means, in its measure, of showing the enormous cruelties
practiced on my sable brethren, and strengthening the generous emulation now prevailing in this country, to put a speedy end to a traffic both cruel and unjust" (Equiano 5).
Equianos narratives were representative of the inherent struggle of being a slave, sharing a common bond of long-lived suffering and ultimate enlightenment with
his African-American counterparts some time later. Considered a man who achieved success by his own efforts, Equiano became a steadfast defender of abolition in Europe. His narratives, which
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