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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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Research Paper Doctorate
American Life Is All About the Fight
This essay is a compare and contrast essay on Ellen Foster by Kaye Gibbons and The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave written by himself. It depicts the themes of both novels as a means to compare and the style and content as a means to contrast. There are no resources provided due to customer request but there are multiple quotations used to explain and provide context for the ideas produced in the essay.
Paper Undergraduate
Affirmative Action: History, Benefits, and Ongoing Debate
Background and History of Affirmative Action
Research Paper Doctorate
Slave Religion and Slavery: Raboteau vs. Elkins Compared
¶ … slavery in American history. Specifically it will discuss the books "Slave Religion: The invisible institution in the Antebellum South" by Albert J. Raboteau, and "Slavery: A problem in American institutional and…
Thesis Doctorate
Slavery and Caste Systems When Repressive Policies
Slavery in the United States, apartheid in South Africa, and the Indian caste system are now all illegal. However, this does not mean that the consequences of these systems of violence against people have vanished. This paper examines the ways in which these three systems continue to affect the lives of people today, even (as in the case of American slavery) the system itself has not been in existence for decades. Widespread institutions based on the power of one group over another group or other groups have significant staying power because even when the ideology that upholds such institutions end or become unpopular, the power structures remain. These power structures can welcome in new ideologies: The ‘new wine' in old bottles effect of such dynamics are one of the reasons that repressive institutions persist.
Paper Undergraduate
Discovery and analysis of a two thousand year old hoard
This paper is written from the perspective of an archaeologist 2000 years in the future. This person has uncovered a site with a hoard of coins while excavating ancient America. The researcher's findings are recorded, as a study of different types of interpretation errors in archaeology – bias, projection, copying errors that lead to false understanding and more.
Paper Undergraduate
Slaves Created Their Own Society
The paper examines how slaves created their own culture and society despite of being in a dehumanized state. The analysis of the creation of slavery culture and society begins with a brief analysis of the history of slavery in the United States. This is followed by the provision of the methods with which slaves created their culture and society.
Essay Doctorate
Origins and significance of African American historical statements
The false and misleading notion that "African-Americans created themselves" completely ignores and invalidates the rich history of those whose ancestry lies in the great African continent.
Research Paper Doctorate
American slavery and freedom
¶ … social, political and economic tensions that led to Bacon's Rebellion. Morgan begins to give the reader an idea of where all the tension begins, as well as a viewpoint to see that here lays a beginning to a possibly…
Research Paper Doctorate
Frederick Douglass life and legacy
More Representative Era: Frederick Douglass's in Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass or George R.T. Hewes's in the Shoemaker and the Tea Party?
Research Paper Doctorate
Lincoln: The Second Political Debate
The primary subject of the second debate between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas was that of slavery, specifically how it related to the addition of new territories to the evolving American union.