A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Charles Ball is a powerful antebellum slave narrative that combines autobiography, travel account, and moral testimony. Recounting Ball's enslavement in Maryland, forced separation from family, sale to the Deep South, labor on plantations, military service, escapes, and precarious returns, the book exposes slavery as both a domestic institution and an expanding national system. Its style is plain, observant, and episodic, marked by concrete detail rather than ornament, and it belongs to the early tradition of African American life writing that helped shape abolitionist literature. Charles Ball was born into slavery in Maryland in the late eighteenth century and endured repeated sales, family ruptures, and brutal plantation regimes. His experiences in both the Upper South and the cotton and rice regions gave him unusually broad knowledge of slavery's varied forms. Dictated to the white lawyer Isaac Fisher, the narrative reflects Ball's determination to preserve his life story and to bear witness against a system that denied enslaved people legal identity, kinship, and bodily autonomy. Readers interested in American history, African American literature, and the moral arguments of abolitionism will find this work indispensable. It offers not only a record of suffering and resistance but also a disciplined, humane account of endurance, memory, and the pursuit of freedom.
AmazonPagina's: 196, Paperback, Sharp Ink
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