Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Slave Ships

The image above is a political cartoon drawn for the 1864 U.S. presidential election. I retrieved the image from http://www.1776mag.com/7-political-cartoons-of-abraham-lincoln/.
This was one of many political cartoons drawn about Abraham Lincoln and his views on slavery. It shows Abraham Lincoln on the left shaking hands with a middle to lower class laborer and having a union allied with liberty, while the left side shows one of his opponents shaking hands with a white rich landowner (most likely a plantation owner from the south) and having a union allied with Slavery.
I chose this picture because the left and right side of this picture not only depict the differences between the two candidates, but also they represent the divide of our nation between the North and South. When this picture was published, America was standing on the edge of a major change that completely reshaped our nation and freed an entire people from a lifetime of enslavement.
The fact that Lincoln is shaking a working man's hand with white and black children running out of the school in the background shows just how naive this publication was. Ironically, it ends up taking almost 100 years for blacks and whites to go to school together because of segregation laws. But it is definitely better than the choice on the right where men are being sold just for the sake of money, money, and more money. So many men have been corrupted by the power of greed and i cant believe that people were willing to treat other human beings in this manner just for a profit. I will never be able to understand how they could sit there and believe slavery was alright. It just boggles my mind. Im so grateful for how the 1860 election turned out. If there hadnt been major splits in party views and if 4 candidates had not run, Abraham Lincoln would not have won the election. Looking at this strange fact, its almost as if it was meant to be. I'm glad that the vision on the left came true and we can call ourselves a nation of Liberty. I honestly wouldnt want to be any part of America during the time of slavery.
Rewards


Monday, October 11, 2010
Whippings
I am surprised to see no one has wrote about this image. This picture is the most popular slave image that pops up into every image of google. Although slavery occurred many years ago, it is still difficult to comprehend the idea of slave owners whipping humans so hard that the scars become thick and raised from the skin. This picture is disturbing to look at; I know this picture is real, but I don't feel a connection with this photo because it's just too unbearable. Slave masters whipped slaves until the blood would drain from their backs and create a puddle on the ground. Reading about the whippings in Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs's narratives creates an image in my head of what the slaves looked like after and this is far worse than what I picture in my head. It is hard for me to picture something so horrible because my mind does not want to believe it. A common whip that was used during this time period was the Kurt. The kurt was a stout whip with a long handle that had about five dangling wide lashes. How is it possible for humans to even think of a tool like this to use on other humans?
Slave Auction

I feel the artist perfectly depicts the slaveholders and auctioneers as indifferent and apathetic towards the feelings of the slaves they are inhumanely auctioning. All the white men in the image are standing around completely at ease amidst families being ripped apart. In the background of the image, a black man, most likely a husband and father, is being whipped in order to represent the physical cruelty of slavery. The brutality and inhumanity of slaveholders and auctioneers of the time is clearly evident in this image.
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Cartoon, Abolition of the Slave Trade
