Frederick Douglass became the most influential African American of the nineteenth century by turning his life into a testimony on the evils of slavery and the redemptive power of freedom. After he escaped from bondage in 1838, Douglass quickly emerged as an outspoken advocate for equality and abolition. He founded the influential newspaper the North Star and, aware of the power of telling one’s own story, he frequently spoke and wrote about his life, publishing three genre-defining autobiographies.
Today, historians consider Douglass’s second autobiography, My Bondage and My Freedom (1855), as his most significant. In it, the author not only describes his transition from enslavement to freedom, but also addresses the psychology of slavery and the racism that defined the lives of the newly free. Through his writings and activism, Douglass prompted people to reckon with slavery’s existence and its aftermath, and, ultimately, to recognize the humanity of those who had been enslaved
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