12 Years a Slave
Relevance of Northup's Beating in 12 Years a Slave
The scene in Chapter 3 when Northup is beaten by Radburn and Burch for daring to argue with him that he was a free man is one that seems particularly relevant to the white readers of the tale. It is important that they hear of this cruelty because until they are in the shoes of the man who is beaten they cannot really sympathize or empathize. So Northup recounts what that experience was like and it makes the reader feel terrible for Northup and feel outraged towards the men who kidnapped him.
I see Northup writing for readers so as to inform them. The implications for us reading now are really no different because what has really changed in the century and a half that has passed? Slavery has been abolished in name but in spirit it lives on in myriad ways. We have the for-profit prison industrial complex that exploits the labor of prisoners in the US; and of course the black population is disproportionately represented in the prison system. We have wage slaves all over the world working for multinational corporations. There is no real equality in terms of politics: those we elect to office become like kings and tyrants, unaccountable to the public that put them in office. We the plebes are treated as though we didn’t know how to take care of ourselves. We are told...
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