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Commentary On Slavery By Another Name

Decent Essays

It is hard to put into words how I felt reading Slavery by Another Name. I felt ashamed, but I wasn’t truly shocked. A question is posed at the beginning of the book which would help understand my feelings better, namely “What would be revealed if American corporations were examined through the same sharp lens of historical confrontation as the one then being trained on German corporations that relied on Jewish slave labor during World War II and the Swiss banks that robbed victims of the Holocaust of their fortunes?” Given the legacy of racism and discrimination towards blacks in the south I couldn’t help but feel that there must have been more than what meets the eye. It wouldn’t surprise most I think, given the know atrocities of Nazi Germany, if an investigation was undertaken that revealed even more atrocities that they had committed towards the Jewish people. This is essentially my feeling in reading Slavery by Another Name. In no way am I trying to …show more content…

After gathering hundreds of sources and personal letters from courthouses he was able to craft an argument that was both moving an historically accurate, in a way that simple history is not. His use of personal narratives brings life to a distance period of American history. The way he weaves the narratives of individuals, whether Cottenham, Pace, or Archie, into the broader history gives a unique face to history, which makes it easily retainable. I, and probably many others, tend to latch on to personal narratives when understanding history and thereby the history itself. The choice of stories was the quintessence of what life was like for African-Americans in the south and if one was to only know the stories he or she could summarize in so many words what his argument was; that life in the south for African-Americans was no different 80 years after the emancipation proclamation than it was at the time of its

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