20th Century Slave Autobiography: Booker T. Washington: A Case Study

Authors

  • Dr. Nandkumar Suresh Shinde, Dr Atul B Patil, Dr. Amol Agase, Dr Archana Salunke, Prof. Rahul Thakare, Ms. Anita Rodage, 7. Prof Pratima Chavan Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48047/f3k3a975

Keywords:

Slave, Slave narratives, Segregations, Racism, black, autobiography.

Abstract

Slaves who wrote their narratives and created their distinct identity in various discourses is an act of bravery and revolution. The revolutionary patterns that emerged through their sufferings and the spirit of overcoming the evils of slavery system. The persistent writings both by men and women contributed to the most influential traditions not only in American literature but also in 
world literary order.

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References

Addison Gayle, Jr. Cultural Strangulation: Black Literature and the White Aesthetic in The Black Aesthetic, edited by himself. Garden City, N.Y. Doubleday and Co, Inc, 1971) Berthold, M. C. (1993) ‘Moby-Dick and American slave narrative’ Massachusetts Review 35: 1: 135.

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Published

2025-04-01

How to Cite

Dr. Nandkumar Suresh Shinde, Dr Atul B Patil, Dr. Amol Agase, Dr Archana Salunke, Prof. Rahul Thakare, Ms. Anita Rodage, 7. Prof Pratima Chavan. (2025). 20th Century Slave Autobiography: Booker T. Washington: A Case Study. Cuestiones De Fisioterapia, 54(5), 596-606. https://doi.org/10.48047/f3k3a975