Each life narrative is set within a historical context. It is necessary to recognize what was historically relevant during the time a specific narrative takes place because life stories do not exist in a vacuum in which society, culture, and time are not present. Each of these factors effect the story that takes place within them.
The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass represents this idea. When Douglass wrote his narrative in the mid-nineteenth century, the United States was experiencing a massive divide over the issue of slavery. It was North v. South, the union v. the confederacy, and abolitionists v. slave holders. In the midst of this division, their was a lack of strong representation to convey the struggles of the black population. The answer to this issue was Frederick Douglass. He was a former slave who had experienced the injustices of slavery and physical abuse as shown in the scenes with Mr. Covey as well as the hospitality, and then eventual unkindness of the more humane slave holders such as the Hughs. By the time he was free, he had taught himself to read and write where Mrs. Hughs had left off. The account of his life served a greater purpose than to regale readers with a narrative of one's accomplishments; it expressed the truth about freedom as well as illuminated the historical moments in which it was written.
Personal Take:
I kept a very in-depth journal from the ages of fourteen to seventeen that covered the beginning of freshman year of high school to the summer before I went to college. Every once in a while, I return to its pages and check up on my former self. When I read the entries, sometimes I make fun of myself for how I conveyed my life and sometimes I pat myself on the back for having the type of insight I had about my experiences at the time. When I read the entries and look at the dates, I get a chance to see exactly how I felt at a certain point in my life about specific things that I did or that happened to me. It covers everything from puberty, to my sister's cancer and how it affected me and my family, to the funerals of friends' parents and my own maternal grandmother's, as well as the confusion surrounding SATs and going to college. There is darkness throughout, as well as light, bright, revelations. When I recognize the historical context of the entries, I get a chance to make sense of them, and in a way, make sense of myself and who I was during an incredibly transformative part of my life.
-Mary Alice Miller