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Which statement best explains how the media supports the text?

from the passage sugar changed the world

User Kungphil
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Answer:

The millions of Africans taken to work in sugar were not taught to read and write. They were not meant to speak, but to work. Olaudah Equiano, who lived from approximately 1745 to 1797, later claimed that he was an African taken to Barbados to work in sugar. He did learn to write, and recounted his life story in an autobiography. Equiano described what it was like to arrive in Barbados and to be sold off to the sugar planters:

We were conducted immediately to the merchant's yard, where we were all pent up together, like so many sheep in a fold. . . . On a signal given (as the beat of a drum), the buyers rush at once into the yard where the slaves are confined, and make choice of that parcel that they like best.

Because he was slight and sickly (as well as smart and useful), Equiano managed not to be sold to a plantation. So while his words take us from Africa to the sugar islands, even his memoir does not take us to the fields. That means we cannot hear the voices of the Africans directly. To tell their story, we must begin with what they did—how sugar shaped their lives.

Step-by-step explanation:

Answer: The image of the author described in the passage emphasizes the humanity and potential of enslaved persons.

User Pheon
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2 votes

Answer: The answer is A. I just answered it and got it right.

Explanation: Hope this helped you. :)

User Aaronster
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