Isolation is a feeling that sometimes it may become a depressing state, breaking the spirit of people. Instead, it is the desire and desire for the community. I feel that people are safe, loved and appreciated in the emotions of this community. In the story of Frederick Douglass, Douglass talks about community awareness of his community and isolation throughout his life. These isolation and community feelings will affect Douglas and his entire life. Through certain events, people, and his own thoughts and thoughts, Douglas began his life as a lonely boy, but Douglas is a self-confident person through the work of events, people, and his own ideas became.
Frederick Douglas (1817-1895) Frederick Douglas was born as an owner of slave and white slave. In addition to being born as a slave, Frederic Douglas can also teach himself how to read and write. Douglas is involved in improving the lives of other black people. Douglas could organize a small rebellion against his master and survived the rebellion. The book of Frederic Douglas was published in 1845 and named the story of the life of Frederick Douglas. - In 1845, the stories published by Frederick Douglas are always memorized in history. The story of Douglas tells the story of his difficult life before planting in New York. In this story he talks about the cruel and cruel behavior of the Master and the depraved life of the slave.
The story of life in Frederick Douglas: appeal of historical emotions The story of life in Frederick Douglas is the impressive explanation of Frederick Douglas's painful experience as a slave and his journey of freedom. In his important article "Douglas and Sentimental Rhetoric", Jeffrey Steele insists that the story and tragedy of Douglas intermix and complicate the direct record, despite being objective I will. Sorrow is obvious in the text, but it does not complicate memoirs.
The second part starts with a journey of freedom of Douglas. As Douglas spent as a slave, Frederick Douglas' life and Times reveal more details about Douglas' career as a retreatingist, not Frederick Douglas' life. The story "And" "My enslavement and my freedom" The second part and the era of Frederick Douglas's life highlight Douglas' anti-slavery activity before and after the purchase of freedom. Douglas' efforts as a decommissioningist in his third autobiography include his work at opposition rallies and meetings, a two-year road show in the UK and Ireland, the creation of monthly Polaris and Douglas did. The famous African-American and Caucasian abolitionists used his print shop in Rochester, New York as a safe haven for fugitives slaves. In Parts 2 and 3 I will address the election of Douglas' president. Part 3 will also explain Douglas' trips to Europe in detail.