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Julius Caesar's Views On Education

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I believe that the author communicated the ideas that slaves really sought after a form of education through literacy, that education was a form of escape for slaves from their lives in the plantation and that receiving an education is the gateway to a life of freedom. Whitehead communicated both of these ideas in the reading of chapters Caesar and Indiana through the characters of Caesar, Cora, Georgina and the inclusion of the narrator. Through Caesar, both the character and chapter, Whithead presents the opinion that slaves coveted education regardless of the consequences and that education was a form of escape from a life on the plantation. Fletcher, a shopkeeper, warns Caesar about possessing a book saying, “The book will get him killed.” (Whitehead 240) …show more content…

Later in the page, the narrator states, “But if he didn’t read, he was a slave." (Whitehead 240) From this quote, the reader is able to gather Caesar's view on why reading is important to him and the author is able to prove his second point to the readers that is; education, more specifically reading, was an escape from the miserable life on the plantation. This is because the only things that slaves read "was what came written on a bag of rice. The name of the firm that manufactured their chains..." (Whitehead 240) So, by Caesar indulging in quality literature and not just reading the terms of his current condition, he is set free to roam the realms of his imagination and not be reminded of his quality of

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