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Olaudah Equiano
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Olaudah Equiano is one of the most studied figures in early Atlantic literature and the history of slavery. His autobiographical work, commonly referenced as the Interesting Narrative, appears frequently in courses on African American literature, postcolonial studies, American history, and the transatlantic slave trade. Scholars and students are drawn to Equiano because his life and writing sit at the intersection of several urgent questions: how enslaved people constructed identity under brutal conditions, how the experience of slavery shaped religious and moral thought, and how personal narrative became a tool of abolitionist argument. His journey from Africa through captivity, across multiple ships and masters, to eventual freedom gives his work both historical weight and literary complexity.

Student papers on this topic take a range of approaches. Comparative analyses are especially common, placing Equiano alongside other writers such as Harriet Jacobs, Mary Prince, Phillis Wheatley, and Ann Bradstreet to examine how race, gender, and religion shaped different narratives of bondage and liberation. Some papers focus on historical context, tracing the African slave trade and Equiano's roots in Benin. Others explore his shifting identity as he moved from master to master, and still others engage questions raised by Maryse Condé's perspective on Western civilization or use film and broader cultural sources to frame arguments about slavery in American history.

A strong essay on Equiano establishes a focused thesis rather than simply summarizing his biography. Evidence drawn directly from the Interesting Narrative — particularly passages on fear, freedom, faith, and the psychology of enslavement — carries the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating Equiano's narrative as straightforward autobiography without acknowledging the rhetorical choices he made as a writer deliberately addressing a largely white readership.

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Paper Doctorate
Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa the African
Equiano's main purpose in writing this Narrative was to inspire Parliament to abolish the African slave trade, which he stated at the beginning when he presented it in 1789. Part of his strategy was to describe himself as a humble "unlettered African" grateful to the West for obtaining knowledge of Christianity, liberalism, and humanitarian principles who is petitioning on behalf of his "suffering countryman" (p. 2). For the benefit of the gentlemen in Parliament at least, he describes himself as a very loyal English subject who has fought in its wars against France from a young age—the Seven Years War in this case. His Calvinist-evangelical Protestantism was evidently very heartfelt and sincere, and in that respect his views were quite different from the deism, skepticism or even atheism more commonly associated with the Enlightenment.
Paper Undergraduate
Magic as a Central Theme in \"Moses,
This paper is written as a sort of book report on that writtne by Zora Hurston called "Moses, Man of the Mountain". The legend that Hurston first has it that there are many people around the world who hold Moses up to be a god or demi-god because of the miracles ascribed to him. People in Haiti hail him as the serpent god, others from Asia to Africa to North America also believe he was able to produce magic and miacles by himself.
Research Paper Doctorate
Olaudah Equiano Enlightenment Era
Equiano displays a degree of complexity in his character primarily because he was able to liberate himself from the ills of slavery, and he fought to end the slave trade. However, he was ultimately brainwashed into believing the superiority of Europeans that propagated this evil establishment. His assimilation allowed him to dislike slavery, but to believe in the good of Western culture.
Paper Masters
Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano
This paper is about the two famous writers, who were slaved of their times during the British empire in England as well as its colonies elsewhere. These two writers are Equiano and Prince, who became an inspiration for many other slaves who also wrote their experiences. A brief overview of both the texts has been discussed in this paper.
Paper Doctorate
Life of Olaudah Equiano
This is a complete four page summary of The Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, The African Written by Himself. Detailed chapter-by-chapter accounts are offered with select quotations woven into the summary narrative. Equiano's story is remarkable as he endures a lifetime of being bought and sold, carried aboard warships, betrayed by people he trusts.
Paper Doctorate
The life of Equiano
Oladuh Equiano's narrative is an important historical text detailing the different types of slavery throughout the world. Equiano's experiences are unique, because he sails around the world with a Captain from the British Royal Navy. On board, he learns ship navigation and seafaring but more importantly, how to read and write. He learns how to talk his way into freedom eventually.
Paper Masters
Equiano, The Prince, and Douglass: Slave Narratives Compared
Equiano / Prince – Slave Stories Introduction The story of Olaudah Equiano began in Nigeria in 1745, when he was born; by the age of 11 Equiano was a victim of kidnapping and was sold to slave traders. His fate was not to be nearly as harsh as millions of other African natives that were seized and put into bondage, as his own writing reveals. But he was a slave and suffered the indignities that accompany slavery. The remarkable part of this story is the way that he tells his own story, written descriptively and in professional narrative, and what happens to him along the way. This paper references his tale, and also the paper reviews the life of a Muslim Prince who became a slave – Abdul Rahman Ibrahima (referred to in this paper as The Prince). In summary, the paper will conclude with the writing of Frederick Douglass, which offers perspective on slavery and is in contrast to the lives of Equiano and The Prince.
Research Paper Doctorate
US History Before 1865
Reception, Perception and Deception: The Genesis of Slavery
Research Paper Doctorate
Equiano Olaudah Harriet Jacob
¶ … Olaudah Equiano's Interesting Narrative and Harriet Jacob's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
Research Paper Doctorate
History of Africa
The Portuguese reached the Gold Coast of Africa in 1439. At first, they were impressed with the culture they found. As they worked their way down the coast "[t]hey found people of varying cultures.