The story of Frederick Douglas first published in 1845 is a moving and provocative text. Douglas born with slavery became a spokesperson for his life; his story is a inhuman explanation of slavery's inhuman influence and Douglas own victory. He expresses the violence against slavery in a lively word, his dynamic personal insight between the slave and the slave owner, and his book to the continuous acceptance of slavery for society and the economy ing. Prosecution of social system.
Every story of Frederick Douglas has the beginning, the middle and the end, and the story of Frederick Douglas begins with slavery and ends as a free man. He was born slavery, but the time that Frederick Douglas spent slavery was very important and it was realized on the timeline of his own life. Epiphany and realization brought about by his interpretation of events of change in life are the actual beginning, middle and end of his slave life for him. - Frederick Douglass, as a teenager, says that he understands English reading, "understanding the way from slavery to freedom". For contemporary audiences, this may be an unintelligible concept, an individual born of birth, understanding the importance of literacy, and identifying it as freedom.
Frederick Douglas detailed the slavery fear in "The Story of Life in Frederick Douglas". In the story of Douglas, a lot of evil is happening, and it is difficult to understand how this savage thing happened in the near future. Douglas did an excellent job demonstrating how inhumanization of black slaves by white ruling class played an important role in the spread of slavery and as a result barbarous acts. If black slaves are not made inhuman, society will not be able to perpetuate the necessary violent culture in order not to compromise the slave economy.
Frederick Douglas was born in Frederick Bailey in Maryland in 1818. When he was young, Douglas worked as a slave at Maryland and the East Coast farm on Baltimore. Especially in Baltimore, Douglas is more flexible than the southern slave. In this town, Douglas first learned how to read and began contacting free educated blacks. Douglas eventually fled to the north of New York at about 20 years old. Here, he met with his fiancée and married him. A free black woman from Baltimore was named Ana Murray. Feeling anxious about the escape of Douglas, the two ultimately settled further north of New Bedford, Massachusetts, Frederick changed his surname from Bailey to Douglas. Douglas works as a worker for the next three years and continues his self-education