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Social And Social Impacts Of Slavery By Fredrick Douglass

Decent Essays

In this book, Fredrick Douglass gives his own perspective of slavery and how it was being a slave. He describes different circumstances that involve social, economical, cultural and religious impacts due to slavery. At the beginning of the story Fredrick describes social impacts on how the slaves were forbidden to learn how to read and write. The slave-owners would explain how it would harm the slaves if they had any form of education. When the young slaves grew older, the slaveholders seemed to prevent them from learning anything, as if it would damage the whites because they would all end up having a sense of self-sufficiency. Since the whites thought they were incapable to society, in order for the slaves to pursue freedom they must …show more content…

Douglass expressed that slaves were just human beings but were always treated as property, that was the economical impact, slaves were property and constantly being traded and taken away from there families. Since they were frequently passed between the whites, the slaveholders could careless that some of the slaves would be apart from there families and the young children were separated from there mothers at birth. Douglass explains that the slave owners would often treat them as animals or objects, they only way they valued the slaves is because they can perform productive labor. Another example of an economical impact would be the differences from the Eastern shore of Maryland and the city of Baltimore. Throughout the story Fredrick switches his settings between the plantation he grew up in “Great House Farm” in Talbot County and Baltimore. Douglass would state that he had a little more freedom in the city of Baltimore then he did at the Great House Farm. This basically results that in the urban populations, like the city of Baltimore, keep their slave-owners from preventing any form of cruelty to their slaves, since the city is a open society. When Douglass was sent to Baltimore, for the first time he meets whites that treat him like a human being. Douglass describes his new mistress Mrs. Auld “I was utterly astonished at

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