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Olaudah Equiano Essay

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Olaudah Equiano is a former African slave that accounts his capture and passage to the New World. He was the son of an African chief in a West African village. He begins his accounts by talking about his family and life in Africa. Equiano describes how he and his sister were kidnapped by African slave traders when he was 11. He was soon separated from his sister and traveled for months till he reaches the Atlantic coast. There he was put on a ship where he encountered other Africans from different villages and White men. Equiano discusses him and the other Africans fear of the White men and even thought that they might be eaten by them. He was exposed to a culture that he had never seen before. He witnessed other African families being …show more content…

It was significant because it was in the viewpoint of a former slave in an era in which slave trade dominated every European empire. Between 1492 A.D and 1820 A.D millions of Africans crossed the Atlantic to soon become a slave, and just over half arrived between 1700 A.D and 1800A.D. The slave trade was utilized by most European empires most notably England. England and its colonies profited immensely off the consumer goods produced by slaves. As rice, tobacco, sugar, and coffee were in growing demand so was the need for African slaves. Slaves were free labors who were not really seen as people but products and goods, like those they labored over. This can be shown in the triangular trading system, as African slaves were shipped to the Caribbean’s and colonies consumer goods such as tobacco were being produced and traded to England. The commercials goods produced of the backs of slaves in the Caribbean’s was the main source of income and revenue for the crown. The racial hierarchy also played a major role in the social division between Whites and enslaved/ free blacks. Late 1700 saw the rise of racial unification between Whites in different social classes. This meant that Africans were seen as inferring, this often led to inhuman conditions. This social division and inhuman conditions due to the slave trades influenced Equiano to publish his autobiography to show his accounts as once being a victim of

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