Nat Turner Nat Turner is an African-American slave born in Southampton County, Virginia on 2 October 1800. He began working in the southern farm in 1831. Everybody thought that he was very smart when he was young. By the time he was 3 or 4 years old, I felt they were very smart. When a young Nat Turner plays with some of his friends, his mother heard he told the children what happened when he was born. She asked later what he said to his children.
Natner is a father, husband, son, and a revolutionary. There is no word other than "complexity" to explain him. But Parker did not try complicating Natner; he wanted to create a hero. Parker Natnart asked critics as to whether slavery is an excuse for describing the modern African American masculinity in a movie. Parker's wish is to prove that the enslaved man is not a passive recipient of slavery but an aggressive combatant against an unjust institution. Film producer emphasizes masculinity: Please fight for freedom until death. He portrays Natnat with this kind of masculinity and created a caring person. In one scenario, when Natnart helped a white white child, the child's father began to notice Turner. Turner did not retreat from this attack, but it was tall in unfair circumstances.
Nat Turner is a symbolic bondage that can be said to be one of the many black voices that brought slavery's moral predicament to the forefront of the country. However, the rebellion of Nat Turner is "reflection of slavery" and vividly emphasizes the inhuman influence of the administration. Meanwhile, his actions also weakened the black myths: little slavery fraud existed and slave Africans were satisfied with their social status. In Natner's confession, the explanation of Gray's Turner's testimony details the shocking slavery rebellion that hit Southampton, Virginia in 1831.
By deciphering the handwritten record on the court, I noticed that Thomas Gray was not mentioned as a lawyer at Nat Turner. There is only one witness to Natner, Thomas Waller, and the story of Waller is quite different from the story version he told in other experiments. My knee is weak. I tried to think about a male historian who can share this story; I am a woman, no one will believe me. There are dozens of trials related to Natner's trial on November 5, 1831. Who will question doubts talked about by these historians and teachers? Who inquires history?