My second memoir that I chose to read was 12 Years A Slave by Solomon Northup. 12 Years A Slave is about a freeman who lives with his family in Saratoga Springs, New York. He is a very good violinist and one day two white men offer him a job for a lot more money that he was currently making. He took them up on the offer and one night while they were in Washington, D.C. Solomon became very ill, and then as he was going to a doctors office he passes out. He was drugged. When he wakes up, his hands and feet are bound in chains and he has no idea where he is. He later finds out that he was sold into slavery by the two men who he was traveling with. When he tries to say that he is a freeman, he is severely beaten. Nobody believes him, and from then on he is never allowed to say that he is a freeman. In the twelve years that he was forced to be a slave, he moved from plantation to plantation doing what his masters told him to do. When he didn't follow their rules he was whipped and beaten. Finally after twelve years in bondage, he is freed by his friends from New York.
The central idea I gained from reading my second memoir was that everyone has a right to freedom. Solomon had his right to freedom taken away from him and that was not right. Everyone has their right to freedom and it shouldn't be taken away from them, especially just based on race, religion, gender, etc.
My central idea relates to Brittany Maynard's death because she decided to end her own life. People who have moral objections to suicide really disagree with Brittany's decision. Since Brittany had her own right to freedom she could do what she wanted to. She was really suffering and she didn't want to deal with it anymore. I think it was okay for Brittany to make the decision that she did. She didn't break any law when she decided to end her life. I don't understand why people freak out so much over her decision. It doesn't even affect half of the people who are making such a big deal about it. She had her right to end her life and she did because she was terminally ill and couldn't deal with living anymore. She didn't do anything wrong, it was her own decision, not anybody else's.
Brittany Maynard's Right To Death
I really enjoyed this blog post because of the summary you told of the book. I'm sure I'm going to read this now because you left me hanging there! I was wondering though, how did you feel about this after reading the book? I also found the story about Brittany very intriguing. Over all, great work!
ReplyDeleteOne thing I really liked about your blog is your summary, I liked the way you included background information. This made it easy to follow, understand, and engages the reader. I think I will defiantly read this book.
ReplyDeleteI liked your blog post. I am also reading 12 Years a Slave, as you may know, and thought that comparing the central idea of freedom to Brittany's story is really cool. You did a good job of connecting the two stories.
ReplyDeleteNice blog post, very engaging and an in-depth summary of your book. However, I would provide information as to why Brittany made the decision she did.
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