Preview

Modern Day Slavery

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1275 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Modern Day Slavery
I was in complete and utter shock when I began to read Disposable People. The heart-wrenching tale of Seba, a newly freed slave, shook my understanding of people in today 's society, as well as their interactions between each other. I sat in silence as I read Seba 's story. "There they [Seba 's French mistress and husband] stripped me naked, tied my hands behind my back, and began to whip me with a wire attached to a broomstick (Bales 2)." I tried to grasp the magnitude of the situation. I tried unsuccessfully to tell myself that this couldn 't happen in modern times, especially in a city such as Paris. How could this be happening? In the following pages of Kevin Bale 's shocking account of the rampant problem of modern day slavery, I learned of more gruesome details of this horrific crime against humanity, such as the different types of slavery, as well as his best estimate of the number of people still enslaved throughout the world, an appalling 27 million. After reading the prescribed two chapters in the book (Child Prostitution in Thailand and Bonded Labor in Brazil), I was in a state of disbelief. I had been taught since elementary school that slavery had ended everywhere when the Emancipation Proclamation was enacted. I had held this belief for years, and it was something that I believed in. Disposable People completely reversed everything that I had learned in the last 13 years about slavery, which was very hard to accept. Slavery is everywhere in the modern world.
Like I said before, I was utterly shocked after reading this book. I didn 't know how to react. I was filled with a combination of rage, sorrow, disbelief, and helplessness that I didn 't know what to do with myself. I couldn 't fully understand how a human being could disgrace another person like this. How could any person ever accept their fate of slavery? I would rather die then be under the direct control of someone else. Since I was having trouble dealing with the



Bibliography: Disposable People Bales, Kevin University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, CA 1999

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In the first weeks of class we discussed how in the telling of history, there is always more than one “historical truth” and in these “truths” history has been edited to benefit different agendas. Because history can be easily manipulated, the lecture stressed how significant these revisions can be in the formation of master narratives. However, we reviewed how through recovery projects, counter-narratives have started to refute these previously “truths.” In these contested recollections we acknowledged at times this new information can be hard to emotionally process. This brings me to the topic of slavery. Up until a few months ago, slavery never crossed my mind as anything other than a horrible and dark chapter in both Northern American and European history. I understood that…

    • 489 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Summary: Cultural Norm

    • 454 Words
    • 2 Pages

    I agree with Mitch, I was surprised by the idea that a slave could make their own money, to the point that they could buy their own freedom. At first I was confused as to why a slave master would agree to letting their slave buy their freedom, but after some thought it seems logical. If the slave gives them enough money then the slave owner can buy another slave with that profit. Their next slave will likely be stronger because they won't have been worked so hard.…

    • 454 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Pro Slavery Satire

    • 199 Words
    • 1 Page

    If it wasn’t for the fact, that I knew this piece was meant to be a satire and to mock, and make fun of a pro-slavery speech, I would have been very offended by it. While reading this, this part stood out too me, “If we cease our Cruises against the Christians, how shall we be furnished with the Commodities their Countries produce, and which are so necessary for us? If we forbear to make Slaves of their People, who in this hot Climate are to cultivate our Lands? Who are to perform the common Labours of our City, and in our Families? Must we not then be our own Slaves? It really goes to show how lazy slave owners were and how conceded they were. It is sad that they really felt that they were that much better than another human being just because…

    • 199 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    This chapter begins to speak in depth about black slavery within America. The first Jamestown colonists were struggling with their new environment due to the fact that they were ignorant of the ability to grow food and could not depend upon the Indians’ help forced or otherwise due to the fact that they were outnumbered and were already on bad terms with them. So the ultimate effect was black slaves, the practice was already being used in South America and it was considered in a way ingenious. I was a bit irritated that merely because the Africans were torn from their land and their culture they were considered inferior to the Europeans. Even though the Europeans could secure and invade the African coastline they were unable to subdue deeper within the continent, not only does that bring some sort of pride to me, it…

    • 1329 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Before this weeks study I knew the Atlantic slave trade had a wide reach but the slave trade database brought my understanding to a new level. An unfathomable number of lives were loss and families torn about by lowering a human being to nothing more than an animal or property. The lives of the slaves were seen as disposable and many did not even survive the voyage by sea. Through our study of the Trans-Atlantic database I was able to learn how far the slave trade stretched and the number of human beings were taken and imprisoned to work while being tortured mentally and physically against their will paints a bleak picture of what this period in history was like by mans moral standards. “It is difficult to believe in the first decade of the twenty-first century that just over two centuries ago, for those European’s who thought about the issue, the shipping of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic was morally indistinguishable from shipping textiles, wheat, or even sugar.” (Eltis,…

    • 384 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The year is 1845; slavery prospers in southern America while southern America prospers through slavery. Thousands upon thousands, innocent people subjugated to slavery are forced to exhaustingly work through the unforgiving heat of the summer through the cold malevolent winds of the winter. All throughout, they face the unmerciful and unfair judgment of overseers and masters. Still, their most challenging and most terrible ordeal was the lack of knowledge and therefore bringing the eventual lack of hope. Through the writings of those few who were fortunate and brave enough to have the knowledge to read and write, we were able to see a narrow glimpse of their hopeless lives and tragic experiences in ante-bellum America.…

    • 1217 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    It explains how women, men, and children are trafficked and sold for use of slaves. It also explains that this is not a new occurrence, but is an issue that has not been widely addressed in the past.…

    • 572 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Many people do not see slavery as a current issue of concern. However, “Globally, the International Labor Organization estimates that about 20.9 million people are trafficked and that 22% of them are victims of forced sexual exploitation”(Alcindor). Readers are forced to acknowledge the existence of slavery in today’s world through the personal experiences told in Sarah Forsyth’s book, Slave Girl. Forsyth presents readers with the sad, shocking, and gory details of her journey from being a sexually abused child, to a sexually exploited young woman, and subsequently to her escape and recovering years.…

    • 1340 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Frederick Douglass Themes

    • 621 Words
    • 3 Pages

    One of the themes I felt were mentioned in this book was the mistreatment of slaves, For example, it is a well known assumption that Frederick Douglass’s father is a slave owner who raped his mother who like Frederick Douglass was a slave. It is sad to know that rape was such a common thing for slaves. Which leads me to think about how in todays world rape is still seen as something that no one openly discusses, but we are free enough to get lawyers, contact the media, and do anything to have our stories heard. Whereas these slaves didn’t have that right.…

    • 621 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Slavery

    • 551 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Does Betheny’s marriage feel like a real marriage? What challenges did she and Jerry face in attempting to live like a married couple?…

    • 551 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Towards the end of the book, Stowe addresses the groups that exist in America in order to convince the readers that the institution of slavery should be terminated. Stowe first describes the experiences and treatment of the slaves in the story as only a small picture of the despair and anguish that all slaves are going through on a daily basis under American law (pg. 374). She now asks the men and women of America if it is something that should be encouraged, protected, and sympathized with…

    • 1059 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The institution of slavery is cruel, aberrant, and immoral as demonstrated by Douglass’s accounts of cruelty. In the novel, Douglass mentions that often a white man must sell his illegitimate slave children “out of deference for his white wife” (23) to “human flesh-mongers” (23) as “it is the dictate of humanity for him to do so” (23). If a white man does not sell his slave children, he is forced to whip his child or his white sons are forced to whip their half siblings. This case demonstrates how the institution of slavery is cruel to both parties involved. The cruelty of slavery carries over to the twenty-first century as well. In the devastated country of Haiti, the “restavec system” developed during the turmoil following the 2010 natural disaster. Tens of thousands of children became orphans and often many of them become restaves, domestic servants that are forced to work day and night. Often restave children are promised housing and an education however, with no one to defend the interests of…

    • 815 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Slavery in America has changed greatly today than in the early 1800s. Although slavery hasn’t completely dissolved, the way it is viewed upon nowadays and what type of work slaves are being used for, are very different.…

    • 286 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The issue of Slavery, though believed by some to be no longer evident, is still, unfortunately, a huge industry throughout the entire world. A few include, sweatshops, sex trades, and even drug cartels. All these plague society, of the, “modern world.” Even though, many years ago, we claimed to have, “abolished,” slavery, the true reality, is that we only ended it in one aspect, in one place. We don't truly look at what still exists. We turn our back to the real issues, to simply pretend that they don't exist.…

    • 486 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Slavery In America Today

    • 1838 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Slavery still has effects that can be seen today. Although abolition has formally ended slavery, it can still be seen in many respects of our world today. Slavery is engraved into United States history and was one of the things that the United States was built on. Due to the end of formal slavery in the 1800s it found new shapes in the prejudice of segregation which lived on for another hundred years. There are people still alive today who can remember a time where such prejudice was institutionalized and can see how it is still rampant in society today. The wounds of half a millennia are not healed in the course of half a lifetime. Slavery can be seen in ways more obvious such as the prison system. Slavery can also…

    • 1838 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics