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Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglass Rhetorical Analysis

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How would you react if you were being enslaved due to the color of your skin? I expect that you would want to do everything you could to change the way the world was thinking. In the Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass written by himself, Douglass is encountered with numbers of different challenges. He has to adjust to the way he is forced to live, educate himself, and reach his goal of making an escape. Overall, he wanted to expose the evils that followed slavery. Douglass appeals to ethos, logos, and pathos in an attempt to end slavery. Therefore, Douglass appeals to ethos in the beginning of chapter one. He then explains that he does not know his own birth date and or his age, "I have no accurate knowledge of my age, never having seen any authentic record containing it" (Douglass 1). Why would the slaves, not be allowed to know the facts about their own life? The answer is simply that slaves weren't supposed to know the amount of things that white people had the privilege to know, only because the slave holders did not want them to have that sort of knowledge. …show more content…

He uses this rhetorical appeal to make his point come across more clearly when describing and discussing slavery. He also uses logos to explain what the slaves could do and what they were forbidden to do, "It was committed in the presence of slaves, and of course they could neither institute a suit, nor testify against him; and thus the guilty perpetrator of one of the bloodiest and most foul murders goes unwhipped of justice, " (Douglass 36). Just from reading this one quote you can easily see that slaves didn't have much say in anything when it came to the being before the masters. Any reader that happened to be educated about slavery could tell how unfair the dominant white American species were to the slaves. During this time, the word sympathy would never apply to the enslaved Americans all due to their

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