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Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglass Summary Essay

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During the 19th Century, slaves were misrepresented to the general population, or, non-slaveholders as “The freest people of the world” due to the fact, according to Fitzhugh’s article, “They enjoy liberty, because they oppressed neither by care or labor”; However, The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, refutes the “facts” commonly given out to the public through a very detailed personal account of Frederick’s life as a young slave growing up between multiple slave plantations in Maryland, and the up-and-coming city of Baltimore. While reading through the Narrative, one might come to the understanding that, only the person on top of history actually writes history, and the narrative is the one of the first well-known documents that …show more content…

In his claim, he states that “He is more of a slave than the negro” because unlike the slave, according to Fitzhugh, the “free laborer” has “No liberty and not a single right” which when compared to not only Frederick’s narrative, but all of slavery is a complete lie. Frederick wrote about his time in Baltimore as a teenager working as a caulker for ships, getting as much money as four to nine dollars a week, which he then has to “pour the reward of my toil into the purse of my master”. To put it in another way, Frederick worked equally as hard if not more than a “free laborer” and had to give up all of his earnings to his master, because he has ‘no liberty’ as a slave. Given the points above, from the final analysis of Frederick’s Narrative and George Fitzhugh’s article, Frederick Douglass manages to shut-down any slanderous lie or misinformation that Fitzhugh tried to spin into the public with his traumatizing life experiences as a slave before he escaped to the north. At the same time, Frederick helps to inform historians today about the unwritten justice, that occurred during the antebellum era in America’s

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