The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 2,Edições 1-2Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2001 |
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Página 32
... slave narratives did . These days it is no longer necessary to bring into the open the denigration of the slaves ' humanity , or to prove that the Black people are as intellectually capable ( and as human ) as the white people . What a ...
... slave narratives did . These days it is no longer necessary to bring into the open the denigration of the slaves ' humanity , or to prove that the Black people are as intellectually capable ( and as human ) as the white people . What a ...
Página 33
Traditional slave narratives tended to regard slavery " objectively , " as an institution and an external reality , rather than contemplating its implications upon the individual lives of the slaves ( Olney 154 ) , and while authors ...
Traditional slave narratives tended to regard slavery " objectively , " as an institution and an external reality , rather than contemplating its implications upon the individual lives of the slaves ( Olney 154 ) , and while authors ...
Página 164
... slave . " Peyton , however , perseveres and is rewarded for this perseverance when many of his emancipated slaves account creditably for themselves in Liberia . Thus the moral of the novel is the spontaneous and almost miraculous ...
... slave . " Peyton , however , perseveres and is rewarded for this perseverance when many of his emancipated slaves account creditably for themselves in Liberia . Thus the moral of the novel is the spontaneous and almost miraculous ...
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