Slave Narrative Blog #2

The narrative by Annie Burton about her childhood and adulthood helped me expand my knowledge of slavery. There was a lot of content that I expected to read about in the narrative and was never mentioned. For instance, I almost entirely expected to read about the childhood discoveries of Annie Burton that addressed how truly horrible slave-owners were to their slaves, but I read nothing of the sort. Sure, Ms. Burton mentioned some whippings and beatings, but her stories were told from the innocent perspective of Annie as a child in slavery. I learned about happy and care-free life was like for a slave child, because the older children had other jobs to do and the master and mistress were more concerned about the Civil War than the little boys and girls on their plantation.

“The memory of my happy, care-free childhood days on the plantation, with my little white and black companions, is often with me. Neither master nor mistress nor neighbors had time to bestow a thought upon us, for the great Civil War was raging.” (Memories of Childhood’s Slavery Days, Annie Burton)

The children could do anything. They’d play all day, and be nuisances to all others. There would be consequences and punishments for, maybe, eating the food that was suppose to be for the slaves in the fields before they received it, but the children did not realize the punishment, similar to how they did not realize what else was in the world. The persons, places, and things in and immediately around the plantation were the only persons, places, and things they knew existed.
This is particularly similar to Huck Finn. The children ran free on Annie Burton’s plantation in the South, and the boys in Huck Finn run free too. In Huck Finn, Huckleberry and Tom knew some things about the world around them, because they had gone on adventures through the countryside. However, they only knew so much. They were limited to the Mississippi, and we all know that the area surrounding the Mississippi is such a small fraction of the entire world. Therefore, the limit of knowledge in the children is eminent in both stories.

“As I read Louis Hughes’ narrative, a feeling, an almost indescribable one, overwhelmed. I couldn’t even fathom the horrors that many slaves went through.” (Norma)

It is interesting to see the differences between the interpretations of slavery that each author expresses. Annie Burton narrated her life on a plantation that was happy despite the punishments and losses of family members, but Louis Hughes approached his narrative differently. The loss of his mother must have had a greater impact on him than the loss of Annie Burton’s mom to Annie. In conclusion, life on a plantation was formed around the attitude and character of the master, the mother, and (not to rhyme on purpose) all others.



5 Responses to “Slave Narrative Blog #2”

  1.   Mr. W. Says:

    The different narratives definitely express different experiences and perspectives. Every slave’s situation was different, to a degree, and each individual interpreted his/her experiences differently. A lot of the time, we generalize about slavery. I think it’s important to remember that the slaves were people, and that their stories are each unique.

  2.   lost1 Says:

    um, like that didn’t really rhyme at the end, but i have knowledge on slaves too! omg how cool! High five!

  3.   lost1 Says:

    why do you just tawk bout children the whole time? i mean there was much more to it than that..duh lol. this part made no sense:
    The memory of my happy, care-free childhood days on the plantation, with my little white and black companions, is often with me. Neither master nor mistress nor neighbors had time to bestow a thought upon us, for the great Civil War was raging.” (Memories of Childhood’s Slavery Days, Annie Burton)

    its obvy thats is plagerrism. duh. kbye
    lol jjkjkjkj

  4.   lost1 Says:

    not
    kbye

  5.   zzzdoctor Says:

    sorry, i did not write the comment from before, jeff was at my house and did not realize that all of my information was still in the leave a comment thing.

Leave a Reply

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-Spam Image