An unknown that is, concerning a fellow of letters, one who shook up the people back in 1789. British readers were fascinated by his first-hand account of being abducted and imprisoned at age 11 and hauled from Nigeria to the New World in a horror-filled captivity vessel. Equiano's story has long been seen as the conclusive version of the notorious “middle passage”, one of the very first captivity tales, a detailed account that gave the inexpert abolitionist crusade a ringing ethical authority. The only problem is that it may not be …show more content…
I don’t think anyone disputes that Equiano was the final self-made man, knowledgeable, intelligent, a captive whom paid for his own liberty, became a seaman, operated a plantation in Central America where he acquired and traded captives, had a change of heart and became an protestor, and later, while he lived in England, made a fortune off his self-published autobiographies, leaving wealth to his mixed British