good answer!
i'm sure there's a million ways of handling a question like that. here's one addressing "slavery and racism" from a recent article about "Sugar" featured in the National Geographic Magazine:
QUOTE
According to Trinidadian politician and historian Eric Williams, "Slavery was not born of racism; rather, racism was the consequence of slavery." Africans, in other words, were not enslaved because they were seen as inferior; they were seen as inferior to justify the enslavement required for the prosperity of the early sugar trade.
UNQUOTE
Because the people who enslaved them had no respect for them or their culture. To them, the slaves were less than human beings. They were harshly mistreated because they were simply "different."
Slaves were treated in a deplorable manner. In most cases, any means to make them feel like less than a human being was the route taken by most slave owners.
The North had less use for slaves than the South did, and many Northern people helped slaves gain freedom.
Pennsylvania
In Roman society women were always considered the lowest of the classes even lower than the slaves.
Yes. Slaves were considered by most to be less than human essentially and were treated as such. They did not have rights and were expected to do what their "master" told them to do. Not doing what they were told could result in physical harm and sometimes death not to mention the emotional harm slaves had to endure as well.
Because the people who enslaved them had no respect for them or their culture. To them, the slaves were less than human beings. They were harshly mistreated because they were simply "different."
They weren't
The ISBN of Less Than Human - novel - is 9780446613422.
Slaves were treated in a deplorable manner. In most cases, any means to make them feel like less than a human being was the route taken by most slave owners.
Slaves were viewed as property and less than human. To the white slave trader the slave was only a commodity to be sold and traded. They viewed the slave with a callus disregard for their pain and suffering.
Less Than Human - novel - has 400 pages.
Tyler owned black slaves and depended on them to work his fields. Slaves were useful for doing work but in order to justify keeping them as slaves, one had to view them as somewhat less than fully human, or at best, an inferior version of humanity.
Less Than Human - novel - was created on 2004-10-01.
The North had less use for slaves than the South did, and many Northern people helped slaves gain freedom.
Plantation owners preferred slaves over indentured servants because slaves were considered property and could be bought, sold, and inherited, providing a more permanent and stable labor force. Slaves were also seen as a lifetime investment whereas indentured servants were temporary workers whose contracts would expire. Additionally, slaves were often treated as less than human and did not have legal rights or protections, allowing plantation owners to exert complete control over them.
The law considered slaves to be property with limited or no legal rights. They were viewed as possessions that could be bought, sold, and inherited like any other asset. Their status as property allowed slave owners to control almost every aspect of their lives.