Why Is Slavery Important Today

893 Words4 Pages

Whitney Gibson
November 10, 2016
American Literature
Kelley Hatch
Slavery Yesterday, Slavery Now Throughout the founding of our great nation so many different issues played a role in affecting American Literature and U.S. History as a whole. Issues such as religion, taxation, women’s rights, tyranny, slavery, etc. Some of which had more of a long lasting effect than others. Slavery so happens to be one of those. Slavery impacted the lives of so many individuals and continues to do so today as well as the writings of American Literature. In America during the mid-1800s the Abolitionist Movement focused most of the attention on the horror and injustice of slavery. Politicians and Prominent abolitionist preachers made slavery an issue that …show more content…

From advice books on childbearing and homemaking, to religious studies and biographies. Her main goal was to send a message to all her readers to not be afraid to address such issues like gender roles, religious reform, slavery, etc. Harriet’s way of letting people know about the injustice of slavery was to write novels. She was able to speak through her books as she was not able to speak publicly at this time. As the Harriet Beecher Stowe Center states, “I wrote what I did because as a woman, a mother, I was oppressed and brokenhearted with the sorrows and injustice I saw, because as a Christian I felt the dishonor to Christianity-because as a lover of my country, I trembled at the coming day wrath.” Stowe’s novels really showed the readers how much slavery was wrong and how it was impacting the lives of this country. She was determined to improve society as long as she was …show more content…

“Over 21 million people are hidden in plain view of the world, trapped in slavery: From Bangladesh to Beijing and from Brazil to Berlin, from Texas to Tel Aviv. Most of them are trapped by debt; all of them are exploited and manipulated via poverty” according to The Dark Shadow of Slavery Today. These slaves are used from factory workers to prostitutes all around the world. Even in the United States, over 20,000 people are being trafficked here from the south to escape poverty. Slavery now is not quite the same as slavery during the nineteenth century. Chains and whips are not what is seen from modern day slavery, however; it is social power, debt bondage, and forced labor that is being seen all over the