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Women In Frederick Douglass

Decent Essays

Women, they play an integral part in every culture and society in the world, but their traditional roles were prevalent in the United States merely decades ago and have been such for millennia. Frederick Douglass’ view of women, similar to many men of his era, portrays an expectancy of women to serve under the men in his novel, yet in The Narrative of Frederick Douglass, he also adamantly disagrees with this generalization by depicting equality in punishment. Through the use of pathos, Douglass impresses the images of women, beaten and helpless unto his readers, sets a standard that the women are not ranked equally as the men. On the other hand, the use of his diction in describing male and female slaves throughout the piece suggests a view …show more content…

Exploration in Frederick Douglass’ life, innermost thoughts, and roles in society, especially his being a feminist, a more accurate lens can be taken when looking through his autobiography to determine how he takes an ambiguous stand on the standards set for women in comparison to men. Although women were often not viewed as having equal rights and standards as the men in nineteenth-century America, Douglass, through his command of language, suggests otherwise. Many amenities were not presented to the slaves, such as beds, not “unless one coarse blanket” could be deemed as such, but no one except “the men and women” were in possession of a blanket (Douglas 8). The inclusion of men and women in equal allowance of materials, shows how women, in at least this sense, were given the same rights as men in regards to necessities, which is easily noticed when one notes Douglass’ feminist philosophy. The equality did not end at the slave necessities, it extends well into the realm of pain as Douglass goes on to note that the male and female slaves have be “made familiar with the bloody lash,” suggesting that no person, regardless of their gender, was spared (Douglass 40). There were no exceptions to this standard, given from how on the fifth page, Mr. Plummer profusely

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