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Book Report On The Fires Of Nat Turner

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The Fires of Nat Turner

In the book The fires of Jubilee, we notice and go through a lot of Nat Turners violent “rebellion” as a former slave in order to get back at what they have gone through. Nat turner takes a complete different approach than what we saw with our letter from Hammond. Nat Turner with the help of a few other former slaves, have created the highest fatalities during his “rebel” from any slave up rise ever recorded. The book was written from a man who has caught his first ever taste of what freedom was like, which is what initially fueled his need for the rebellion.

The rebellion that was created clearly was not just a random act that just happened when one random slave snapped and finally had enough. The rebellion was carefully …show more content…

If you notice how a lot of the slave owners in the 1800’s was actually not the type to treat their slaves unfairly. Many of the slave owners allowed time with family, and even holidays off. The deep south where a little over one-third of the white families were slave owners, they believed that if they were to keep their slaves so busy serving their masters they would not be able to have time, nor the strength, to come up with a plan to revolt against slavery. In the book, you notice right off the bat that Mr. Turner is not quite like other slaves. Turner, just like others, was born into slavery and was not brought over from another country, but just born into. What makes him different is Nat Turner actually remembers a lot of what happen when he was born, so is actually fully aware that what is going on in the world of slavery. A lot …show more content…

The revolt lasted up to two days, but what we see if Turner actually does not practice the killing himself. Turner finds it hard to find enough courage to even find his former slave owners and slaughter them and their family. It turns out a lot of them actually influenced a lot of his religious point of views, and that “In spite of his enslavement, in spite of his own preaching’s and prophecies, he did not know that he could do it.” (54). A lot of the slave army actually took it too much into their own hands slaughtering infants, children, and any other whites that did not even have part to do with the

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