Notions of Manhood in Frederick Douglass and Thoreau
.... Still, the book focuses on the situation of
Douglass himself as a slave on a .... with a lifelong struggle to control one's own destiny in the context of
God's will ....
(1643

7

)
Frederick Douglass' Use of Literacy
.... The awareness that slavery is an abomination against
God and humanity obviously leads to
Douglass' awareness of his own terrible circumstances. ....
(1620

6

)
Frederick Douglass
....
Douglass's own faithfulness to his
God as a means of winning physical and spiritual freedom is contrasted with the slaveholders hypocrisy. ....
(1622

6

)
Narrative of Life of American Slave
.... allowed this undignified event. Similarly, in an outburst to
God,
Douglass once again sheds the self-control. His cries of "O that ....
(2435

10

)
Bronte and Douglass
....
Douglass' description of the dehumanized nature of those that sings them demonstrates how .... was a testimony against slavery, and a prayer to
God for deliverance ....
(1581

6

)
Ibsen's Hedda Gabler
.... to overcome the oppressors.
Douglass believes in education and
God as means of overcoming oppression. Ibsen is clearly against the ....
(1715

7

)
Resistance to slavery
.... why
God allows the pagans to flourish, yet Rowlandson never wavers in her assumption that
God is, at all times, on her side only. But
Douglass is continually ....
(1858

7

)
Frederick Douglass
.... support for holding up under pressure." He quotes
Douglass, who observed, "Every tone was a testimony against slavery, and a prayer to
God for deliverance from ....
(1865

7

)
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass
.... leaders who support slavery and yet profess to be representing
God. The idea of emancipation from the state of slavery is paramount in
Douglass's thinking and ....
(1628

7

)
Experiences of Religion and Racism
.... to hate those who forced him to lie, and to distrust
God because he .... Frederick
Douglass, in his autobiography about slavery, points out the strength that one ....
(1595

6

)
Bondage and Freedom
.... not in a condition to assume a very proud or joyous tone (
Douglass 339-340 .... In part, the greater significance of property was religious--a sign that
God was on ....
(1801

7

)
Hypocrisy of the Puritan Era
.... Their dedication to
God was also hypocritical for this same reason--they applied ....
Douglass sees through the hypocrisy eventually and learns his own worth in the ....
(2837

11

)
The Heroic Slave
.... the change of heart, mind and soul in his white readers at which
Douglass is aiming. .... a beast of burden instead of like the proud and noble child of
God that he ....
(808

3

)
Frederick Douglas
.... leaders who support slavery and yet profess to be representing
God. The idea of emancipation from the state of slavery is paramount in
Douglass's thinking and ....
(1628

7

)
Anti-Slavery Crusader John Brown John Brown was an anti-slavery ...
.... This was because he was quite willing to do violence in
God's name for the .... In 1847, Brown met the famous black leader Frederick
Douglass and told him of his ....
(2405

10

)
Anti-Slavery Crusader John Brown
.... This was because he was quite willing to do violence in
God's name for the .... In 1847, Brown met the famous black leader Frederick
Douglass and told him of his ....
(2477

10

)
African American Literature
.... soul" which has been taught to understand that there is a
God and a .... In the Narrative of the Life of Frederick
Douglass, an American Slave,
Douglass shows the ....
(1484

6

)
Nature of the Human Soul in Poems & Stories
.... soul" which has been taught to understand that there is a
God and a .... In the Narrative of the Life of Frederick
Douglass, an American Slave,
Douglass shows the ....
(1484

6

)
The Organization of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
.... Like
Douglass, Twain and Wheatley, Harding-Davis sees the robbing of such of human .... in kennel-like rooms, eating rank pork and molasses, drinking
God and the ....
(3220

13

)
America"s Race Problem
.... that they can scarcely be pitied." Thus, he did not believe that "
God, who is .... one who believes in the equality of all races, as Frederick
Douglass, WEB DuBois ....
(1192

5

)
Theoretical Perspectives on US Race Problem
.... that they can scarcely be pitied." Thus, he did not believe that "
God, who is .... one who believes in the equality of all races, as Frederick
Douglass, WEB DuBois ....
(1192

5

)
African American Women
.... [Sojourner Truth] had risen, facing
Douglass. "Frederick," she asked, "is
God dead?" (Pauli 193). She was equally straightforward with all. ....
(2511

10

)
Abolitionist John Brown
.... Frederick
Douglass said of him, "His zeal in the cause of my race was far greater than mine. .... Brown regarded himself as an instrument of
God. ....
(1807

7

)
Creationism and Evolutionism
.... entire range of creationist claims (including the belief that
God exists as .... slavery, relating the experience of former slave Frederick
Douglass, who related ....
(3917

16

)
Biblical Accounts of Slavery
.... and distinctive purposes which descended from the common authorship of
God were altered .... Perhaps the words of Frederick
Douglass are most appropriate: I am not ....
(1986

8

)
Various Short Essays in Sociology
.... Locke did not see the power of kings as being given to them by
God but rather as deriving from some social condition, and to analyze this .... 5.
Douglass had been ....
(2718

11

)
The Dialectic of Freedom
.... Frederick
Douglass, like Greene, believed that freedom comes only from continued .... oppression and push toward freedom in Celie's simple conversations with
God. ....
(2647

11

)
Black American Spiritual Songs
.... and give what may seem short shrift to such figures as
Douglass and the .... through most specific religions was a persistent belief in a "High
God," which was ....
(4893

20

)
Middle Passage Johnson
.... an African
god." I said nothing. Surely you can understand why. As in the works of authors such as Booker T. Washington and Frederick
Douglass, the narrator's ....
(1561

6

)
The Epic of Gilgamesh
.... The source of the problems of both men is similar--each offends a
god or gods and is punished for this act. .... Aristophanes. Lysistrata. (
Douglass Palmer, tr.). ....
(1548

6

)