Perspective on the Slave Narrative

This lesson covers the slave narrative from different perspectives - as a historical record, a piece of literature, political rhetoric, and as an autobiography. Great lesson plan with connections to reading, writing, and history.  Includes an assessment and extension component.

Standards & Objectives

Learning objectives: 

After completing this lesson, students will be able to:

  • Describe the slave narrative and its importance in the abolitionist movement
  • Gain experience in working with the slave narrative as a resource for historical study
  • Evaluate the slave narrative as a work of literature
  • Examine the slave narrative and other documents in the context of political controversy as an argument for abolition
  • Explore themes of self-actualization and spiritual freedom within the slave narrative
Essential and guiding questions: 
  • What role did the slave narrative have both in historical and in literary traditions?
  • How did William Brown’s narrative contribute to the abolitionist movement?

Lesson Variations

Blooms taxonomy level: 
Understanding
Extension suggestions: 
  • There are many other slave narratives available through EDSITEment at the Documenting the American South website, including narratives written by ex-slaves in the years following the Civil War. Students might read Booker T. Washington's famous Up From Slavery to see how the slave narrative genre changes when the immediate political pressures that helped shape Brown's work are removed. (At the Documenting the American South website homepage, click on "North American Slave Narratives," then click "Collection of Electronic Texts." Scroll down to "Washington, Booker T." and select "Up From Slavery.")
  • Students might also compare Brown's written narrative to some of the oral narratives of slave times collected by Work Progress Administration archivists during the Great Depression, many of which are accessible through EDSITEment in the "American Life Histories" collection at the American Memory Project website. (At the website's homepage, click "Browse," then scroll down and click "Life Histories" to enter the collection. Click "Search by Keywords" and type the word "slave" into the search engine to retrieve a list of relevant oral histories.)
  • Further documentary material on slavery is available through EDSITEment at the following websites: Documents of African-American Women, Freedmen and Southern Society Project, and The Valley of the Shadow.
  • A comprehensive EDSITEment Curriculum Unit on Frederick Douglass's narrative is available at From Courage to Freedom: Frederick Douglass's 1845 Autobiography.

References

Contributors: