Please Note: This program will only be offered online via Zoom.
Frederick Douglass was a visionary—a prophet who could see a better future that lay just beyond reach. His talents were extraordinary and he put his gifts to use in the service of freedom, helping to drive American slavery into oblivion. After the carnage of the Civil War, he played a central role in reshaping the republic and spent subsequent decades defending and perfecting it.
Historian Richard Bell, a professor at the University of Maryland, examines Douglass’s life to reveal more than another great man on a pedestal. He was the slave who dreamed of being a senator, the unlettered child with no formal schooling who wrote three autobiographies and became one of our greatest literary figures. His life bursts with contradiction and with change. Douglass was the dignified, brilliant, and courageous freedom fighter who could sometimes be insecure, vain, and arrogant. He was an outspoken feminist who treated his own long-suffering wife like his servant. The fire-breathing insurgent would eventually become an out-of-touch elder statesman.
As he explores this many-sided man’s life, family, and career, Bell observes that to understand how the boy born into bondage in 1818 became the Frederick Douglass that we hold in such esteem, his visionary genius needs to be seen not as innate, God-given, and infallible, but instead as the imperfectly beautiful product of growth, change, self-doubt, and struggle.
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