Summary Of Slavery By Another Name

Improved Essays
Slavery by Another Name This video starts soon after the 13th amendment is ratified and slavery is abolished (at least on paper). The cotton economy was severely hurt from the new need of payed labor. The farm owners had about half of their investments in slave labor. With an overall poor economy at the time as well, some white people saw all the new free black people as competition for work. There was white resistance against a bi-racial government. New laws were being made to target black people, including the pit laws. These laws made some non-offenses have serious repercussions. With these laws, police could easily target black people and give them severe punishments, such as talking loudly in public. These severe punishments typically …show more content…
The documentary focuses on a couple different families and people throughout the film, as well as migrant workers in general. To give some background on to the poor living conditions and hard work these workers do, a reverend said that farm owners “used to own slaves, now they rent them”. This was in reference to migrant workers. We learn how migrant workers work for about half of the year and make about 900 dollars on average. This can fluctuate largely depending on how well the crop is selling and the quality of the crop that year. There are many ways that farmers can take advantage of migrant workers. One of the first ways mentioned is that migrant workers in general are uneducated and don’t have firm understanding of their rights or how to better their rights. The farm owners on the other hand have powerful lobbying machines to have influencing power in policy. On a much more micro level, individual farm owners can simply tell the migrant workers that the crop isn’t selling well (whether it’s true or not), so that they can pay the workers less. Another way that a migrant worker can be taken advantage of is through their crew leader. A crew leader acts as a middle man between the migrant workers and the farmers. For example, a farmer can be paying a dollar for a basket of cherries and the crew leader would take that dollar from the farmer and only give the person who picked those cherries 15 cents. The documentary also showed some of the poor living conditions the migrant workers had. They would either camp out near the farmland or live in disgustingly dirty work camps. Along with this, the migrant workers would be transported from farm to farm in even worse conditions that cattle have for transportation. For example, cows must be given a break every so often for water, while the migrant workers don’t typically stop until they reach the next farm or work camp. One last sad

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    The Struggle in the Fields After watching the PBS Documentary Cesar Chavez and the UFW Grape Boycott I have learned the many struggles and determination that the Chicanos showed to help construct and create a better living for each and every one of the Immigrant families. Throughout the video there were testimonies and stories of how the Immigrant workers were being treated until and throughout the boycotts to get better wages. For example, a woman was asked how much she was being paid and if her child would become a field worker just like her. She stated that she was payed 2 dollars a day and she believed that her child should rather be in school instead of the fields.…

    • 386 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The “weeping time” of slavery took place on March 3, 1859. It was a period when the largest sale of African-Americans were auctioned off at a racetrack in Savannah, Georgia. The reason why this particular sale was noted as being the “weeping time” is because during the two-day auction, it rained continuously. It is told that on the days of the auction it looked as if the heavens above were crying the tears of the heartbroken and frighten enslaved men, women and children. Although, husbands, wives, and parents of young children were kept together; sisters, brothers, and other blood kin were sold.…

    • 326 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Harvest Gypsies is a collection of articles written by John Steinbeck in 1936 about the migrant workers and the lifestyle they lived. Steinbeck starts off the book discussing the migrant workers, originating in California, and how they differ from the ‘old kind of laborers,’ immigrants. They come around when crops such as, peaches, grapes, apples, and lettuce, come into harvest and they move to wherever work is needed. “The migrants are needed, and they are hated” (Steinbeck, pg.20). They came across to outsiders as ignorant and dirty and a threat to the crops if they refused to work.…

    • 1186 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In the 1800’s many people of colour did not enjoy the rights and freedoms that people enjoy today. In this time, Slavery was active which many people of colours lose their freedom. More than 11,863,000 Africans were shipped across the Atlantic, most slaves died in the Middle Passage due to horrible conditions on the ship transporting them. As a result between with a death of 9.6 and 10.8 million Africans arrived in the Americas alive. With the odds against Aminata Diallo, she faces many losses but through these losses Aminata manages to re-defines herself.…

    • 1669 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The unjustifiable sufferings of migrant farm workers in the United States These days, even though we are fighting strongly for human rights issues such as human trafficking, racial equality, asylum seekers and refugees, child abuse and LGBTQ rights, we have to admit that not everyone is equal. We worked hard to ensure that the people around us have the rights they deserved, but we are ignorant to the suffering of others. In his book Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies: Migrant Farmworkers in the United States, Seth Holmes explores the lives of the Mexican workers who cross the border illegally to come to the U.S and provides an interesting idea on how “the fault lines of class, race, citizenship, gender, and sexuality” have shaped the experience of…

    • 1231 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    A Recreation of Slavery The goals of Reconstruction in America were to restore the union of the North and the South and to help the freed slaves achieve civil rights. During this time, many accomplishments were made in order to gain equal rights for African Americans such as the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments which abolished slavery, gave many African Americans citizenship, and gave them the right to vote. While the slaves were technically freed, they were not truly free because of state laws trying to undermine these amendments which were attempting to extend their civil rights. Reconstruction was not successful because of state government attempts to limit the rights of African Americans, which pushed for a recreation of slavery to occur.…

    • 895 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Rhetorical Analysis of a slave narrative Slavery was an unfortunate and devastating mark on American history. We talk about it and learn about it in classes but it is rare that we read about honest firsthand accounts from actual slaves. The account in question comes from the viewpoint of Tempie Herndon Durham which was saved through the passage of time by the federal writers project which can be found online via the library of congresses online affiliate. This story holds influence not only socially and politically but gives us information on the history and culture of a group of people who had been tried to be silenced which makes its interest fall under the umbrella of everyone in the united states for influencing this country and how…

    • 1039 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Great Essays

    Sarah Ruan Professor Garvin History 11 4 June 2015 Takaki Paper #1: The Hidden Origins of Slavery (Chapter 3) When one thinks of the origin of slavery, they commonly think of the profit that the South was able to make off of it. Although this is a major origin and would explain why the institution carried on so long, the text in this chapter gave me a different understanding of the history of slavery. The author, Ronald Takaki, gives us a feel of the early colonial foundations of Virginia and the progression of slavery.…

    • 1574 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    One thing that stood out in the reading was that there was a slave occupation as the slave driver. This makes me wonder how the other slaves perceive these slave drivers; traitors or selfish? I also wonder if they were picked for the job or they asked for it, which makes me think that these slave drivers only thought about themselves and they are willing to hurt other slaves to avoid working or getting hurt themselves. In the reading, West Turner stated, “Ole Gabe didn’t like that whippin’ business. When Marsa was there, he would lay it on ‘cause he had to.…

    • 297 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    El Contrato Analysis

    • 1297 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The Unfree and Unsafe Labour Conditions: Portrayed in the Lives of Mexicans Farm Workers Do we want to live in a nation with social closure towards migrant workers or do we want to provide autonomy towards such workers? Well, many of the times it is problematic for individuals to have a say because of the class and social inequality that exists in their workplace. Many of those with advantages and privileges may be able to adapt to changing conditions, but marginalized groups are often at a disadvantage to do so. Correspondingly, this idea is evident in the documentary El Contrato, by Min Sook Lee. The story delineates the struggles that Mexican workers migrating to Southern Ontario go through while being tomato labourers.…

    • 1297 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The second primary source, “An Eighteenth Century Slave Narrative,” was written by Gustavus Vassa. In London during 1789, Olaudah Equiano, named Gustavus Vassa by one of his proprietors, gained an education and published his story of when he was a slave. He and his sister were kidnapped from the Kingdom of Benin, now known as Nigeria, when he was eleven. He was transported by British slave traders from Africa to Barbados, then Virginia, as a slave. When Equiano first encountered a slave ship and white men, he refused to eat and he was flogged.…

    • 1180 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    “I’ll offer anybody here $50 an hour if you’ll go pick lettuce in Yuma this season, and pick for the whole season,” he said. Amid jeers, he didn’t back down, telling the audience, “You can’t do it, my friends.” (Thompson 82) Regardless the amount of being offered to most Americans, No one will accept the job and rather choose to work at fast food chain or retail than work in the field and get more pay. Most Americans will not challenge themselves to work in the field to gain more skills in agriculture and will let the undocumented do the hard work.…

    • 1228 Words
    • Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Informative Essay On H2a

    • 1307 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Every week, much like I suspect is similar with many of you, I go to the supermarket or the store to get fresh foods to make dinner for my family of eight. But ever stop and wonder; how is all of this food so readily available for our consumption? For just a second I would like to take you into the shoes of migrant farmers. Why they are here, what do they do, and what their work entails.…

    • 1307 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Without land to farm, many people are being forced to work as day laborers, fishing or building embankments. Some families are even being forced to abandon their…

    • 778 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Farmers are taking advantage of because they realize that they will work for little money. The wages that farm workers are paid is little for the work they perform. Working in the fields requires strength and skill. Most of the work they perform requires carrying heavy loads of produce and repetitive motions cutting the fruits and vegetables. Such hard work should pay more as “The median family income is $13,000 for an indigenous family.…

    • 1360 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays