Open Access
American Research Journal of English and Literature
ISSN (Online): 2378-9026
DOI: 10.46568/arjel
A Challenge to Power: Thoreau and Douglass’ Writings on Institutes of Power and Slavery
Abstract
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) and Frederick Douglass (1818-1895) were contemporaries who
both wrote autobiographies about their experiences during a transformative time in American history. On the
surface, these two men‘s autobiographies have virtually nothing in common. They are set in completely
different areas of the country. Thoreau‘s Waldentakes place during a two-year, two-month, and two-day stay
(compressed into a one-year narrative) in the woods near Concord, Massachusetts. On the other hand, Douglass‘
autobiography, The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: An American Slave Written by Himself, spans
several decades and is set in a variety of locations, to include a plantation in the South and the urban city of
Baltimore. Moreover, Thoreau writes his narrative from the position of a free, white, privileged, formally
educated (Harvard graduate) male elite; whereas, Douglass‘s narrative is told from the worldview of a black,
former slave without a formal education or prestigious family background.