In the work of The Middle Passage, the authors, Daniel Mannix and Malcom Cowley, present what the middle passage was in as close to a firsthand account as they are able. Mannix and Cowley define the middle passage as the base of the triangular course from Africa to the New World with black cargo (Wright). In their account of several voyages across the middle passage, the authors convey scenes that create vivid mental pictures that can cause stomachs to become uneasy. The slaves brought over on the ships were stripped of everything: clothes, family, their homes, and, mostly importantly, their freedoms. What wasn’t lost, however, was their culture, and those native African cultures still have an impact on us today. There
In the work of The Middle Passage, the authors, Daniel Mannix and Malcom Cowley, present what the middle passage was in as close to a firsthand account as they are able. Mannix and Cowley define the middle passage as the base of the triangular course from Africa to the New World with black cargo (Wright). In their account of several voyages across the middle passage, the authors convey scenes that create vivid mental pictures that can cause stomachs to become uneasy. The slaves brought over on the ships were stripped of everything: clothes, family, their homes, and, mostly importantly, their freedoms. What wasn’t lost, however, was their culture, and those native African cultures still have an impact on us today. There