Thursday, October 24, 2019

What were the major events in the life of Frederick Douglass that formed his identity?

The first
major life event that formed 's identity was his witnessing his Aunt Hester being brutally
whipped. This event occurred when Douglass was very young. At the time he did not understand why
his aunt was being beaten. However, the event frightened him and taught him that the world was
fundamentally unsafe for him and those he loved.

A second event in early
childhood that shaped Douglass's identity was his being sold away at the age of seven from his
plantation of birth. Douglass was taken from his friends and family and placed in an unfamiliar
and decidedly more brutal environment. Douglass would later note that this was when he began to
understand what slavery was. He began to understand how the system of American slavery worked to
dehumanize both enslaved people as well as those who held them captive.

A
final defining moment in Douglass's early childhood was his learning to read. Upon learning to
read, Douglass began to realize that the oppression of black people is a matter of social
hierarchy and racial brutality. The oppression of black people was not due to innate inferiority
(as he had previously believed). Learning to read marked a turning point when Douglass began to
believe that he could eventually achieve emancipation and help abolish the system of slavery
itself.

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