Frederick Douglass has a deeper understanding of freedom than the simple manumission of slaves. Throughout the Narrative, Douglass links the formal freedom of slaves with a fuller, deeper, more spiritual sense of freedom that elevates the soul and allows free men and women to reconnect with their suppressed humanity.
Douglass sets out in painstaking detail his many, and often brutal, experiences of slavery. However, his personal testimony is not just a litany of woes; Douglass is anxious to inspire those fellow African Americans still enslaved. To that end, he must give them hope, however remote a prospect it may seem. Each experience, then, must reveal that his spirit cannot be broken, no matter how hard slavers try to destroy him. He may not have had legal freedom throughout his enslavement, but he still retained his inner, spiritual freedom. Ironically, his slave masters lack this freedom while still holding the whip. Their souls have been corrupted by active participation in the "peculiar institution." They are forced to cling to a willful distortion of Christianity in order to justify slavery and their involvement in it.
Douglass's notion of freedom is not abstract; indeed, he is intensely suspicious of the highly abstract concept of freedom upon which the United States was founded. The reason for this is that it coexists with the brutality of slavery, the ultimate negation of liberty. Douglass understands freedom in concrete, practical terms. In the Narrative, he proffers a number of routes to achieving it, such as escaping to a Northern city, for example. Life is far from rosy up there, especially for a black man, but it is still much better than toiling away on a Southern plantation.
Douglass also values education as a means to achieve freedom. By learning to read and write, he has been given a glimpse of freedom. However, this knowledge can be a curse as well as a blessing. It makes him all the more frustrated because, despite his newfound knowledge, he still cannot escape. It takes an act of violence against Mr. Covey, his slave master, to give him the confidence fully to attain freedom. In doing so, he begins to realize his humanity.
The idea of freedom emerging from the Narrative has a number of components, all of them practical: education, community solidarity among African Americans, alliances with white abolitionists, and a strong sense of rebellion. Yet, all these elements are ultimately a means to an end. The end is to allow African Americans to get in touch with and share an underlying humanity from which they have been systematically excluded for so long.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Critically discuss how Douglass’s Narrative might be read as a meditation on the multiple meanings of freedom.
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