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Slavery
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Slavery stands as one of the most consequential and morally urgent subjects in historical study, examined across courses in American history, African American studies, literature, and political economy. Its reach extends far beyond a single era or region, touching the foundations of American political, economic, and social development, as well as shaping Caribbean societies and African communities affected by the transatlantic trade. Works such as John Hope Franklin's From Slavery to Freedom, Frederick Douglass's and Harriet Jacobs's autobiographies, Booker T. Washington's Up from Slavery, and Solomon Northup's Twelve Years a Slave appear frequently as primary and secondary sources because they ground abstract historical forces in lived experience.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some focus on personal narratives, comparing the autobiographies of Douglass and Jacobs to analyze how race and gender shaped individual experience under the institution. Others pursue regional or thematic angles, examining slavery in the South, in the Caribbean, or on Virginia's Eastern Shore. Literary analyses connect slavery to works by Phillis Wheatley and even to Gothic fiction such as Poe's The Black Cat. Additional papers address specific populations — children in slavery, women's gendered experiences — or trace the transatlantic slave trade's economic and cultural consequences across Africa and the Americas.

A strong essay on slavery defines a clear, focused argument rather than surveying the institution broadly. Evidence drawn from primary sources — slave narratives, legal records, economic data — carries particular weight and lends credibility to historical claims. The most common pitfall is treating slavery as a monolithic experience; acknowledging variation by region, gender, legal status, and time period produces a more accurate and persuasive analysis.

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Essay Doctorate
Strangers on shores: key terms and concepts from Parrillo
This is an essay about three groups which coexist in the United States, but they have had a sorted past because one of the groups has had to have domination over the other two. Blacks and American Indians have long been subject to indifferent and often brutal treatment by Americans of European heritage. This essay discusses the forms of prejudice, some of which still exist, that Whites have used to subjugate other peoples not like them.
Research Paper Doctorate
Civil War, Slavery, and the Quest for a Color-Blind Society
The American dream… the great job, the picked white fence and the happy faces. People from around the globe have come to the United States to make the dream a reality. But for the dream to exist in the first place,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Slavery in Antebellum America. Specifically,
¶ … slavery in antebellum America. Specifically, it discusses the experiences and challenges of the early "slave Muslims" in antebellum America.
Paper Doctorate
Lies My Teacher Told Me
Loewen, James W. (1996). Lies My Teacher Told Me. New York: Touchstone
Research Paper Doctorate
Massachusetts Bay Virginia Massachusetts Bay
Massachusetts Bay and you -- Perfect (or, as perfect as one can be on this godless earth) Together"
Research Paper Doctorate
Biography on Sarah Moore Grimke
Judith Neis' writes of Sarah Moore Grimke, "It is not accidental that it was a Southern woman, born in the heart of the Southern aristocratic ideal, who first traced the pattern of racial and sexual prejudice in…
Research Paper Doctorate
Freedom What Is Freedom? Freedom
What is freedom? Freedom is the right to choose: the right to create for yourself the alternatives of choice. Without the possibility of choice and the exercise of choice a man is not a man but a member, an instrument,…
Essay Undergraduate
Fiction Has the Unique Attribute of Being
Fiction has the unique attribute of being able to be relatable to a person regardless of its implications to real life. No matter how bizarre a plot or character might be, it is the meaning behind everything that is…
Paper Masters
Northern and Southern advantages in the American Civil War
Civil War Introduction How did it happen that the North won the Civil War, notwithstanding the fact that the South had its own powerful advantages? This paper explores that question using chapters 11, 12, 13 and 14 for reference sources. Background on the Southern economy and politics The South greatly expanded its agricultural industry (the plantation system) between 1800 and 1860, and in doing so became "increasingly unlike the North," the author explains in Chapter 11. The "lower South" relied on cotton (short staple cotton) and the market for all that cotton in New England and in Great Britain made many plantation owners wealthy. Because of the skyrocketing cotton industry, more and more slaves were needed to tend those crops, and some 410,000 slaves were moved from the upper South to the lower South. And yet the South depended economically on the North (which had a booming industrial growth period) and the South did not establish many industries besides cotton to beef up its economy (p. 302). Those landowners with hundreds of slaves and huge cotton plantations controlled the politics; hence, a great deal of political power was in the hands of a few wealthy men. Hence, the lack of industrial strength was a Southern weakness, and the existence of a commercial-industrial culture in the North was its strength.
Paper Undergraduate
World War II's Impact on Race, Gender, and Social Change in America
This is a three page paper. It is about American history. The paper addresses the impact that World War Two had on minorities including Mexican-Americans, Chinese Americans, Japanese Americans, Native Americans, and African-Americans. The paper also addresses the impact the war had on women in America. The conclusion is that the war paved the way for the civil rights movement, but that prejudices were endemic and hard to break.