Despite the violence, pirate ships are shown to be places of joy and escape for Jack. Piracy is depicted as a grand adventure, with more of the film's action occurring at sea than on land. Jack sums it up when he says, "It’s not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails that's what a ship needs but what a ship is…what the Black Pearl really is…is freedom." In "Masterless People: Maroons, Pirates, and Commoners", historian Isaac Curtis argues that piracy was ultimately the result of a struggle for freedom by "masterless" people. Pirates of the Caribbean takes pirates who were abandoned by society or who left on their own accord, and highlights their bravery and
Despite the violence, pirate ships are shown to be places of joy and escape for Jack. Piracy is depicted as a grand adventure, with more of the film's action occurring at sea than on land. Jack sums it up when he says, "It’s not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails that's what a ship needs but what a ship is…what the Black Pearl really is…is freedom." In "Masterless People: Maroons, Pirates, and Commoners", historian Isaac Curtis argues that piracy was ultimately the result of a struggle for freedom by "masterless" people. Pirates of the Caribbean takes pirates who were abandoned by society or who left on their own accord, and highlights their bravery and