Introduction Imagine yourself as slave, hungry, beating, and sick, as you have everyone who is free, family, and everyone who allows you to be robbed of you. But you will escape. It will pull you away from everyone you love, it risks your life, but it is the price of freedom from the slavery in the south. The slave started acting oddly and gathered tools, clothes, and food. You look around and all you see is a quilt that has been cleaned. Then, every few days you will have a new quilt with each new pattern, each quilt, your fellow slaves will start to notice increasingly more preparatory work accordingly.
A simple fact of slavery and the subway train is that everyone has heard about the subway street, but not everyone knows what it is. First of all, it is not underground, not a railroad. Underground Railroad, @ actually means escape from slavery from farmers to warehouses, from the basement to the barn, until they reach the north safe road. - For this work, I was asked to read the book "Hyundai Hydea" which handled slavery in the mid-nineteenth century. In my thesis I will discuss how this book describes everyday life as slaves, problems of freedom, and the racial reality of this age.
Colson Whiteheads' s novel "Underground Railway" conveys more than figurative "underground railway", but underground railway built by slaves for underground free country. Contrary to the comment I read, I feel that the character is "undeveloped" and related to its role. The author vividly explains the dangers of trouble periods before the civil war and the risks surrounding thought and escape attempts will prepare for Cora's safe escape by killing you.
Today, the subway road is shown on one side of the story of how slavery ended in the United States. The two main events are the Civil War and Lincoln's liberation declaration. However, the subway should be in the same position. Without it, the other two major events will never happen. The majority of people in the north oppose slavery and spreading it to the west, but they do not approve the termination of slavery in the south with military force. The subway road changed this. The south sent armed men to the north to take back the slaves who escaped. The runaway law in 1850 forced northern government officials to assist slave captors