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The Book ' 12 Year Of Slave ' : Empathy And Brotherly Love Would Have Saved The Day

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The Sufferings of “ 12 Years Slave”: Empathy and Brotherly Love would Have Saved the Day
In book The Blank Slate (Pinker 2002), Steven Pinker of Harvard University had presented this argument: Thanks to natural selection, human nature is built around greed, lust, revenge, rage, machismo, and tribalism. The film “12 Year of Slave” portrays such a human nature in its visceral terms.
The main theme of the film is slavery, greed, and tribalism, American life characteristics on a par with apple pie and baseball. The film is based on a true story of educated carpenter, musician and family man from New York State who, in 1841, was abducted and sold into slavery deep in the south –--a gruesome common phenomenon in 19th century America.
The film opens with Solomon Northrop (the protagonist of the film) cutting sugar cane on a big plantation. Then the film reverts back to an earlier time, a time Solomon is leading a normal life by being his own master and living in New York with a wife and children. Solomon is hired by a pair of white men to play a violin in a circus. The pair spots in Solomon something more valuable than his musical talent: the color of his skin, his brawny physique and his athletic characteristics parade him as textbook example of hard-wearing slave, a commodity coveted in the America of antebellum era. Soon, the pair conspires to capture Solomon and sell him into slavery. To cover up for their transgression, the film depicts the pair faking civility by

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