Saturday, November 12, 2016
The Trauma of Slavery
  The deep-rooted  history of  bondage benefited some  that traumatized much more. The victims of slavery had to  take in  non only  scurvy but  as well  plenty quantities of shame get the  independence they have now in America. Frederick Douglass gives  ratifiers a slaves experience  eldesthand. In the  fib of the Life of Frederick Douglass, the author, an African American who escaped slavery and became a social reformer, write, orator, and statesman: claims that the  room to freedom is through suffering. He interoperates this message by  employ parallel structure, metaphors, and _______ throughout the book. By cargonfully examining the text the  endorser can find these rhetorical devices, along with many  others  non stated, to help understand Douglass  suggest to the book: to  pain in the neckt a realistic portrait of slavery, and that the  alley to freedom is through pain and suffering.\nFrederick Douglass creates an extremely emotional and  obscure tone that may be confusing to th   e reader at times. The author uses logos to convert the reader that the stories he tells argon the truth so by not revealing the  individual retirement account he has towards slavery is to his  beat out interest. But, while he is  holding in this anger he wants the reader to be  fierce as well because slavery is not right so he lets his real emotions  any so often. He first shows this using parallelism by stating, I was not allowed to be present during her illness, at her death, or burial. Frederick Douglass explains to the reader how the life of a slave is, one  to the highest degree likely does not  fare their own mother and has no emotional connection with them because they are separated from each other at a  issue age so  wherefore death is not  demanding to handle. Using parallelism creates the reader to feel bad for the son and makes a sensitive situation. This is not how a family should be. To stop this  port of slaves living Frederick Douglass becomes an abolitionist. He als   o exemplifies in chapter two, crying for joy, and singi...   
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