Required Text #1: Read this short excerpt from Mahommah Gardo…

Question Answered step-by-step Required Text #1: Read this short excerpt from Mahommah Gardo… Required Text #1: Read this short excerpt from Mahommah Gardo Baquaqua’s memoirs about his experiences being captured in West Africa, enslaved, and taken to Brazil. Brazil imported the largest number of enslaved people of any country, and yet this memoir by Baquaqua is the only surviving account that exists from a slave in Brazil, so it’s an incredibly valuable historical document for giving us first-hand insight into something that millions of enslaved people experienced. The events he described took place in approximately 1840; his memoirs were published in 1854 after he secured his freedom.Required Text #2: Read excerpts of a memoir by an enslaved woman in the Caribbean, Mary Prince. She was eventually able to secure her freedom, and she published her memoirs in 1831.Question: 1. Based on the personal accounts of Baquaqua and Mary Prince, what strategies were used to attempt to dehumanize, control, and abuse enslaved people? What forms of resistance were practiced by enslaved people in these accounts? Provide specific historical examples from the text to form a thesis about the practices of both oppression and resistance. note: You must cite page numbers for the different texts.  Example: Primary Sources:  (Baquaqua, pg #), (Prince, Pg#). Be careful to analyze and not summarize. Text #1:Image transcription textChildren of God’s Fire A Documentary History of Black Slavery in BrazilRobert Edgar Conrad THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY PRESSUniversity Park, Pennsylvania… Show moreImage transcription textCABIN 15 Feel 40 Yeet G C Store Room HINIH HHHHH Store Room 1.Sections of a Slave Ship… Show moreImage transcription textAFRICAN SLAVE TRADE 23 resist so much and survive so manyafflictions, as men of stone and of iron. 1.4. A Young Black Man Tells of HisEnslavement in Africa and Shipment to Brazil about the Mid… Show more… Show moreImage transcription text24 AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE AFRICANSLAVE TRADE 25 and called to byname, the drum beating to… Show more… Show moreImage transcription text26 AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE AFRICAN SLAVETRADE 27 be sure took my attention very much;the windows in the houses also wre… Show more… Show moreImage transcription text28 AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE AFRICANSLAVE TRADE 29 a few miles from thecity, at a farmer’s house, whi… Show more… Show moreRequired Text #2: Read excerpts of a memoir by an enslaved woman in the Caribbean, Mary Prince. She was eventually able to secure her freedom, and she published her memoirs in 1831. Image transcription textTHE HISTORY OF MARY PRINCE, A WEST INDIAN SLAVE. RELATEDBY HERSELF. WITH A SUPPLEMENT BY THE EDITOR. To which isadded, THE NARRATIVE OF ASA – ASA, A CAPTURED … Show more… Show moreImage transcription textPREFACE The idea of writing Mary Prince’s history was firstsuggested by herself. She wished it to be done, she said, that goodpeople in England might hear from a slave what a slave … Show more… Show moreImage transcription textTHE HISTORY OF MARY PRINCEPREFACE accuses them; and to holdthem up more openly to h… Show more… Show moreImage transcription textTHE HISTORY OF MARY PRINCE, A WEST INDIAN SLAVE (Relatedby herself) I was born at Brackish-Pond, in Bermuda, 10 on a farmbelonging to Mr Charles Myners. My mother was a hou… Show more… Show moreImage transcription textTHE HISTORY OF MARY PRINCE I staid at Mrs Pruden’s about threemonths after this; I was then sent back to Mr Williams to be sold. Oh,that was a sad sad time! I recollect the day well. Mrs Prud… Show more… Show moreImage transcription textTHE HISTORY OF MARY PRINCE THEHISTORY OF MARY PRINCEmentioned, by Miss Betse… Show more… Show moreImage transcription textTHE HISTORY OF MARY PRINCE THEHISTORY OF MARY PRINCE highestbidder; and the people w… Show more… Show moreImage transcription textTHE HISTORY OF MARY PRINCE THEHISTORY OF MARY PRINCE side;* fedand rubbed down my mas… Show more… Show moreImage transcription textNote from Dr. Walter: I cut many pagesto shorten your reading. In the passagebelow, she is now an adult… Show more… Show moreImage transcription textNote from Dr. Walter: The Methodists and the Moravians are twodifferent THE HISTORY OF MARY PRINCE Protestant Christiandenominations THE HISTORY OF MARY PRINCE Date Hil… Show more… Show moreImage transcription text13 of 18 THE HISTORY OF MARY PRINCE land as long as (pleaseGod) I shall live. I wish the King of England could know all I have toldyou. I wish it that he may see how cruelly we are used. … Show more… Show moreImage transcription textNOTES NOTES or dignified names, presumably as a means ofhumiliation. See Equiano’s inhabit the islands, establishing plantationsthere and only leaving the area after Interesting Narrative … Show more… Show moreImage transcription textruddy sons of Britain, down to the jetty offspring of Afric’s soil’ (1:240-48). in Spring Gardens, at the extreme north end of the town,and looks the very 57- a black driver. a black slave driver…. Show more… Show more  History US History HISTORY MISC Share QuestionEmailCopy link Comments (0)