1. Frederick Douglass and Harriet Beacher Stowe
Nevertheless her fictional elements are necessary because she cannot display direct bias against slavery like Douglass can with his personal accounts "instead, she uses it as a tool to protest human subjugation. ... He expresses the need to assert human rights as a dire issue. ... To break free from human captivity, Douglass believes that education is the answer. ...
- Word Count: 2701
- Approx Pages: 11