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American Slavery
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American slavery stands as one of the most consequential and morally complex subjects in historical study, making it a central topic in courses ranging from American history and African American studies to literature, political science, and sociology. Its academic significance lies in how deeply it shaped the nation's economy, legal structures, racial ideologies, and social hierarchies. Students engage with primary sources such as Frederick Douglass's speeches, proslavery arguments like those advanced by Thomas R. Dew, and narratives like Twelve Years a Slave, as well as scholarly works such as Oscar Reiss's Blacks in Colonial America, all of which reveal the breadth of perspectives surrounding the institution and its justifications.

Papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some focus on specific historical periods, examining slavery in colonial America or tracing its evolution through the 1800s and into the Civil War era. Others adopt literary analysis, using works like Caryl Phillips's Crossing the River to explore how fiction captures enslaved experience. Still others pursue cause-and-effect arguments, investigating the factors behind the Civil War or tracing slavery's long legacy through the Civil Rights Movement, the criminal justice system, and racism in contemporary education and culture.

A strong essay on American slavery requires a clearly bounded thesis — either a defined time period, a specific argument about cause and consequence, or a focused textual analysis. Evidence drawn from primary sources, historical legislation, or documented lived experiences carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating slavery as a single, static institution rather than acknowledging how it evolved across regions, centuries, and legal contexts.

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Paper Undergraduate
Blacks in colonial America
In the book Blacks in Colonial America, Oscar Reiss (1997) paints a clear picture of the problems that these people faced and the struggles that they went through, which was the purpose of the book overall, and the main…
Paper Doctorate
Critique of the hypocrisy of American slavery speech
This paper discusses Frederick Douglass' speech The Hypocrisy of American Slavery. In making his speech, Douglass tackles the three most commonly used excuses justifying slavery: the alleged inhumanity of slaves, the idea that slaves were not entitled to liberty, and the idea that slavery was divinely ordained. However, instead of making his own arguments in favor of these factors, his basic approach was to use existing arguments, acknowledged by slaveholders that supported his statements. First, he showed how the laws established by slaveholding states already recognized the humanity of slaves. Second, he used a combination of the American enthusiasm for liberty and a list of how slavery deprived African Americans of their liberty to demonstrate that the deprivation of liberty that came with slavery was morally wrong. Finally, he approached the third argument that people made in support of slavery, which was that slavery was divinely inspired. However, Douglass failed to flesh out this argument. He simply made the statement that what was inhuman could not be divine.
Paper Undergraduate
Slavery and the Slave Economy in Colonial America
Modern observers likely know in general terms that many Africans were enslaved through the 17th to 19th Centuries, but few probably know the extent of suffering that newly enslaved Africans endured from the outset, nor do many modern observers likely know the legal sources that were used to justify and legitimize the practice in the Old and New Worlds. In fact, some authorities argue that it was not until the end of the 17th Century that racial divisions had become sufficiently codified to protect the "peculiar institution" of slavery in the New World. Given the impact that slavery has had on American society, gaining a better understanding of the origins of the slave economy and its implications for civil rights in the United States represents a timely and valuable enterprise. To this end, this paper provides a review of the relevant literature to describe the background in which slavery emerged and a description of the slave economy. Throughout most of the 17th Century, the tobacco economies of Virginia and Maryland depended of the contract labor of white indentured servants, who were employed for a term of four to five years, then freed.
Paper High School
The coming of the Civil War
Niven, John. The Coming of the Civil War, 1837-1861. Arlington Heights, IL: Harlan Davidon, Inc.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Slavery an Examination on American
The history of slavery in the United States is a very long and complicated tale, one filled with much violence, murder and mayhem. Beginning roughly in the early 1700's, white Southerners began to bring, if not kidnap,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Janie Crawford's Emancipation and Self-Realization in Their Eyes Were Watching God
The African-American heritage in the American society has experienced a long history of bondage to the slavery system, which created the divide between the white and black Americans in the country.
Research Paper Undergraduate
A conflicted people: historical and social perspectives
¶ … colonial period was characterized by the tensions of creating a new world, while retaining the habits of their cultural and social traditions. One of the greatest conflicts within this period is how to retain…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Sexual slavery in Mexico
There are many people in the U.S. And elsewhere who do not frequently account issues regarding modern slavery. For many the images that come to mind, with regards to slavery are those that create a mental return to…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Slavery: historical context and systemic impact
Legacy of African-American Slavery in the United States
Paper Undergraduate
Racism in the United States:
Racism continues to be a powerful social issue throughout contemporary American society. In the United States, the two principal original sources of racism were (1) the typical atavistic xenophobia that generally exists…