Fifty Years in Chains Or, the Life of an American Slave
By:Charles Ball Published By:Double9 Books
Paperback
Regular
Rs. 195.00
Sale
Rs. 195.00
Regular
Rs. 325.00
SALESold Out
Unit Price
/per
SKU
Home >
>
Fifty Years in Chains Or, the Life of an American Slave
About the Book
“Fifty Years in Chains" is an ancient autobiography history story book written by Charles Ball. Written with the resource of Ball himself, this novel is an emotional portrayal of his life, describing the issues, struggles, and injustices he skilled in some unspecified time in the future of his 5 a long time of slavery. Ball's frank generating affords readers with insight into the difficult data of slavery in America at somepoint of the nineteenth century. He describes the bodily brutality, compelled hard work, and dehumanization he suffered at the hands of slaveowners. Ball moreover addresses the emotional toll of being eliminated from circle of relatives and friends and the continual fear of punishment. Despite the problems he skilled, Ball's narrative consists of moments of resilience, perseverance, and the pursuit of freedom. His path shows the tenacity and perseverance of the human spirit in the face of injustice. In famous, "Fifty Years in Chains" is a super and instructive story that sheds slight on a horrible duration in American records while acknowledging the tenacity and perseverance of those who endured slavery.
African-American slave from Maryland named Charles Ball is most renowned for his memoir, Slavery in the United States (1836), which details his experiences as a runaway slave. Slavery in the United States: Ball's Autobiography is the main source of information on his life. Charles Ball, a black man, spent forty years as a slave in Maryland, South Carolina, and Georgia under many masters. He also spent one year in the navy with Commodore Barney during the late war. His life story was published in 1837 with Isaac Fisher's assistance. Charles Muskett released Frances Catherine Barnard's re-edited version of The Life of a Negro Slave in 1846. The life of slaves and their owners in the early 19th century is described in Charles Ball's memoir. The stories of other African Americans that the author knew are included in the book. As a result, it is among the rare works of Western writing from that century that give voice to African experiences. Among them are accounts of religious practices in the region of Africa where Ball's grandfather was born and raised, as well as a young African's account of an encounter with lions in the Sahara desert. Ball's autobiography states that, about 1730, he was sent to Calvert County, Maryland, as a slave from a wealthy African family.