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How Does Page 66-67 Frederick Douglass Use Of Paternalism

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In this passage on pages 66-67 Frederick Douglass addresses the myth of Paternalism in acute detail, attacking every aspect of the myth and debunking it with logic and first-hand accounts. By connecting the Paternalism myth to the white children in his town, he cleverly appeals to the white mothers of the north and makes it easy for them to agree with his pleas. By exhibiting his teacher-like relationship with the white children of his town, Douglass reveals the inaccuracy of the myth that slaves are forever the student. His depiction of the assumption of a valuable role in the children’s lives through such language as “adopted” and “converted” displays how he himself is an example of the erroneousness of the myth (66). The use of “adopted”
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