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Shvoong Home>Arts & Humanities>Frederick Douglass' "My Bondage and My Freedom" Summary

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Frederick Douglass' "My Bondage and My Freedom"

Book Summary by: AcaDemon    


This paper explains that the hard work and sense of freedom mentioned by writers like Washington, Crevecoeur and others differs
markedly from what Douglass says about the American ideal; this fact is not surprising because Douglass and his immediate ancestors did not come to America on their own but were removed by force from their native land and made to work as slaves. The author points out that Douglass never sees himself as an American because, as a slave, he was kept him from belonging to any society of free men until he left slavery and entered a new world. The paper relates that Douglass moved from one oppressed minority to another--the free slave constituting another oppressed group, but this did not make Douglass any less an American in cultural terms but never as the ideal and fully connected American referred to by Washington and Crevecoeur.
Published: November 12, 2006
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