Frederick Douglass
Introduction
One of the key figures in the United States in the nineteenth century was Fredrick Douglass (c. 1817–1895). Fredrick Douglass was born to a slave woman in 1817. This automatically made him a slave. It is thought that his father was the white owner of his mother (Lee, 13-30). Douglass is most famous for escaping from the shackles of slavery in the year 1838 and becoming one of the key leaders and advocates for the abolition of Slavery in the United States. He revered by the African American community and Americans in general for his fight against slavery. Long after his death, U.S. Civil Rights Movement leaders referred to him in their speeches and used his fight to inspire Americans to fight for the rights of African Americans. This paper looks at the life of Fredrick Douglass and his massive contributions to the abolitionist movement and women's suffrage in the U.S. The paper particularly focuses on Fredrick Douglass' works and the works of other authors that mention or focus on him.
Contributions towards abolition movement
Fredrick Douglass published many books and letters in support of the abolitionist movement. His works and speeches were primarily arguments against slavery. They highlighted the ills of slavery and why slavery was wrong. The main objective of his works and speeches was to show that slavery is unjust, immoral, ungodly, unnatural, and cruel. He made his arguments very in his speeches as a member of the American Anti-Slavery Society that was led by Garrison. He also made them clear in his autobiography, which he called the Narrative. This autobiography was the first of two. His second autobiography was called My Bondage and My Freedom. In it, he expanded his arguments as the tension between the Union and the Southern states increased over the issue of slavery and trade before the Civil War (Sundstrom). According to Douglass, the main intention of his articles and speeches and books was to expose to everyone how evil slavery was (Douglass, 192). Douglass stated in his biographies that his fight against slavery commenced while he was still under bondage. He noted that he was driven to rebel against slavery because of its cruelty, unnaturalness, and injustice.
According to slavery apologists, blacks deserved slavery because they were not human. Slavery apologists regarded blacks as degenerated human species. Some of them also regarded blacks as beasts. The argument that blacks are not full human beings was first infamously made by Sepulveda in the 15TH century and excellently countered later by Bartolomé de las Casas (Fredrickson, 36). Despite being countered, the argument remained popular in colonies. It was used by slave traders to justify the capture and use of Africans as slaves and the inhuman conduct they had been subjected to. Thomas Jefferson argued against the argument in one of his works (Jefferson: Query 14). Douglass made it his mission to point it that Africans/ blacks are complete and rational humans. He mocked those who thought otherwise by use of examples. In one of his speeches, he refused to argue that Africans are human to ridicule the idea that they were not.
And instead of arguing that Africans were not beasts, he argued that they had been brutalized and made beasts through slavery. He made it clear that blacks are human and pointed out the hypocrisy of slavery apologists by asking several rhetorical questions. For example, he asked why specific laws existed to limit the actions of blacks if they were beasts and incapable of making their own decisions. He also asked why the slave owners and masters wanted to convert slaves to Christianity, and yet they did not believe they were human. Douglass also asked why the slave owners did not want converted slaves to attend religious gatherings. The purpose of asked all these questions was to reveal the hypocrisy of slave owners and slavery apologists. To show that blacks were fully human, he also pointed out that slave owners banned their education and yet at the same time, made a profit from the skills and the inventions made by blacks.
Douglass argued that the claim that Africans were beasts was premised on...
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