Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Freddy Douglas the Great Writer

Frederick Douglas is someone who I learned about each year in grade school around January and February, along with Martin Luther King Jr and Rosa Parks. His life never stood out to me in school because it was lumped together with so many other great men and women. It seemed like he was just another abolitionist and could not be as great as someone like Sojourner Truth or Harriet Tubman. Reading the autobiography of Frederick Douglas changed my mind completely.

One of the most interesting parts of his autobiography that stood out to me was when he was talking about the constant singing going on in the plantation. He says, “slaves sing most when they are most unhappy” (937). Whenever I would picture slaves working hard in the fields sweating profusely, I would always imagined them singing joyful songs of things to come. Singing about what they had to look forward to in the afterlife to keep them going everyday. I never imagined that they would sing songs about their daily lives and troubles instead. I guess it makes sense because that is all they know. They do not know much of joy or happiness, but only constant hurt and struggle. I just assumed that because most of the writing from the slaves that I have read was centered on hope and their belief in God, that their act of singing would be the same. I liked how he noted many people in the North had the same thoughts about their singing as well. They must have just come across as a hopeful group of people who could be happy no matter their circumstance.

The other interesting thing that many other minority writers have pointed out was how the white Christians would use the Bible against them. They would be pious church goers on Sunday who talked about loving their neighbors and enemies, but would come home and beat their slaves to almost death. It was almost comical how Douglas points out that he is reading the same Bible that one of his masters does, yet they see two totally different things. It was the slaves who were being good to their masters, but the masters were not paying their slaves the same respect as said to do in the Bible. This is yet another text that reverses the roles of beast and humanity. For the African American’s were always labeled as sub-human, but it appears they are the ones who acted with the most humanity and dignity towards life.

2 comments:

  1. The singing also stuck out in my eyes as it did for you. Singing is usually a joyous time for most people but not for them. I mean when I am in a good mood I usually burst out a Broadway tune or some other song that has been stuck in my head for days but this is the opposite for the slaves. I can imagine these songs they sang had much more meaning than we could understand today. There singing I think could have been used as an outlet for emotions that the slaves could use to express themselves.

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  2. Hi Sara, Thanks for the good post on Douglass. It's still a powerful indictment of slavery and human cruelty. Certainly there is a great amount of hypocrisy in the slave owners praying and then using the Bible to support their horrid oppressions. dw

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