"Reconsidering Slavery" - I recently remembered that I attended a lecture by famous historian Ella Berlin. Professor Berlin is an excellent university professor at the University of Maryland. Over the past decade, he also won many awards and awareness. In 2002, President Clinton appointed Professor Berlin as a member of the Advisory Committee of the National Humanities Foundation. Professor Berlin recently took office as an excellent senior at the University of Illinois in the spring semester, so I am visiting campus.
The first article was written by Ella Berlin entitled "Agreement with Slavery in America in the 21st Century." In this article, Berlin looks at the recent public attention to slavery and notes the existence of slavery in the radio, the Internet, monuments, museums, books, television, and countless public places. He also called slaves released from the slavery's entrance to the early colonies that he called the "creation of the charter", and the slaves released by the liberation declaration he called "free generation" and the thirteenth revision It developed.
Ella Berlin's view on the evolution of slavery has two more themes. Geographical diversity and negotiation between master and slave. Thousands of people divide slavery over 300 years into three generations (charter, plantation, revolution) Each generation has four chapters, each chapter concentrating in a different area. Berlin's discussion on time and place changes may be simple, but he made considerable efforts to explain the conditions of slavery from a slavery perspective. In his second work "Domestication", Berlin's argument focuses on a central theme, ie negotiations between master and slave. Berlin added two generations to his age analysis (immigration and freedom) and expanded the field of analysis accordingly.
Islay Berlin, Margaret Washington, Winthrop Jordan and Edmond Morgan have taken a variety of approaches to research the origin of American slavery and the role of race. Berlin's focus is on social transformation from the official Atlantic Creole to the later black slave. Washington, on the other hand, is focusing on why slaves in certain areas are preferred over other areas. - Protection of slavery in a free world A new world that begins with a person devoted to freedom and human dignity has the potential to maintain slavery as an inhumane institution. Some people may say that the founder's father is mere prejudice against people in Africa.