How Did Frederick Douglass Overcome Abuse Of Slaves

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In the Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass there is the abuse of black slaves, racism, and the systematic degrading of slaves. Frederick Douglass began his life as a slave at the beginning of his life but he was eventually freed; which is when he decided to write an autobiography. In his autobiography he details the treatment of himself and others who were enslaved by white men and their families. The way that slaves were treated was not how any human should be treated under any circumstance. Slaves were treated as if they were not humans, they had been dehumanized by their owners and environment so much so that they didn’t even see themselves as human. All of the chapters throughout Frederick Douglass’ autobiography he alludes to the …show more content…

Frederick’s aunt was tied up like an animal to a post and severely whipped. Being exposed to this unnecessary and unfounded abuse over and over again would make all the slaves feel as if they weren’t worth anything; that they did not deserve any form of kindness or respect, and that no matter what they did they weren’t safe. This would mentally break anyone, seeing another human being being treated in this way just because of the color of their …show more content…

In this quote Frederick writes about how his feet were exposed to the cold of winter as a child. The slave children that Frederick Douglass was raised with were not provided with a warm place to sleep, were fed in troughs, and were not given proper clothing. They weren’t treated like humans they were treated like livestock. This would make the children feel as if they were livestock, they weren’t humans but an animal that were to be owned. This just furthers the idea that slaves were systematically dehumanized, the slave owners had a process which they would put slaves through and that Frederick was put through where they were taught through actions that they were not worth anything and that they didn’t deserve love or