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Slavery: The Dehumanization Of Slaves By Frederick Douglas

Decent Essays

Throughout his narrative Frederick Douglass tells about his experience as a slave. Frederick’s experiences show that slavery dehumanizes the slave and the slave holder. Slaves didn’t have rights of their own and were treated like animals, while the slaveholders had complete power over the rights the slaves should have had as human beings. This created a unique situation that destroyed the morals of both the slave and the slave holder, which dehumanized them both. In the book Frederick learned how to read. Once he knew how to read he started to really understand how unfairly slaves were treated. The slave masters didn’t want the slaves to learn to read for this exact reason, the slave masters were so evil that they wanted the slaves to think that they deserved to be treated horribly just because of the color of their skin. This truly shows how dehumanized the slave holders had become, they let making money overpower their morals. The slaves were not given …show more content…

The slave holders did this to try and destroy the natural affection of the mother and the child. The slave holders did this with little or no thought, just like they would with cattle or other animals. The slave holders tried to dehumanize the slaves even from a young age by treating them like animals rather than humans. If a white man or a slave holder killed a black man or a slave, they did not receive any punishment. Frederick stated, “killing a slave, or any colored person, in Talbot county, Maryland, is not treated as a crime” (Douglass 30). The slave holders would kill slaves just to scare other slaves, they did not fear any punishment. This shows the way that the slave holders saw the slaves, they saw them as less than human, unimportant. Owning slaves made people feel that they were better than these “barbaric”

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