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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page paper which examines the history of the African American people in relationship to slavery and society. The paper discusses how the African American dream is likely still a dream for many, in relationship to true equality in society. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JA7_RAdaaa.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
different perspectives. However, one could also well argue that even today, more than 100 hundred years after the freeing of the slaves the African American people have still not achieved
a true equality in the nation. The following paper examines the history of the African American people, as it relates to the dream of freedom and equality, beginning with the
institution of slavery, through the Civil War and Restoration and then the Civil Rights Movement and the legacy today. The African American Dream: Still a Dream?
African Americans, in the early days of the nation, were not considered human beings in the same sense that whites were considered human beings. As
such people felt it was perfectly acceptable, for the most part, to steal them from Africa and enslave them as labor in the United States, and elsewhere. There are many
arguments concerning this past reality. For example, many argue that the nation would not have become what it did become without the existence of slaves, which allowed the United States
to become economically and agriculturally very powerful. But, even this does not eliminate the truth wherein slavery was a horrific and dehumanizing condition that has harmed the African American people
and essentially left the white population of the nation still ignoring the impact of history concerning the African American people. Slavery was
a very demeaning and destructive institution in the nation and yet it seemed to take a long time for much of the public to recognize this. Even among people who
opposed aspects of slavery there was dissention, which indicates that the majority of the population did not simply see, in a righteous and logical way, how slavery was wrong. For
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