Up from Slavery: An Autobiography
Booker T. Washington
Belletristik / Hauptwerk vor 1945
Beschreibung
"Up from Slavery: An Autobiography" is a profound and influential work by Booker T. Washington, first published in 1901. It chronicles Washington's journey from being born into slavery to becoming a leading African American educator, orator, and advisor to presidents. The autobiography details his early life in slavery and the hardships he faced even after emancipation, including poverty and the struggle for education.
Washington's narrative focuses on his tireless efforts to promote education among African Americans, particularly through the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, which he founded and where he advocated for vocational training. He believed in self-help, hard work, and practical skills as the means for African Americans to improve their status in society.
The book also addresses Washington's philosophy of racial uplift, emphasizing patience, diplomacy, and industrial training as strategies for Black empowerment. While his approach drew criticism from some contemporaries for being too conciliatory to segregation, "Up from Slavery" remains a landmark in African American literature for its historical significance and its role in shaping black leadership and education strategies in the early 20th century.