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subjugation
[ suhb-juh-gey-shuhn ]
noun
- the act, fact, or process of subjugating, or bringing under control; enslavement:
The subjugation of the American Indians happened across the country.
Other Words From
- nonsub·ju·gation noun
- self-subju·gation noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of subjugation1
Example Sentences
One could read into this a subtextual commentary on the subjugation of women found in conservative strains of what Reed refers to as “the big three” — Judaism, Christianity and Islam — or even society in general.
But Jefferson remained blind to the fact that his enslavement and subjugation of other human beings and his belief that Black people did not possess the capacity for reason provided political and philosophical backing for the “skin-aristocracy” that Douglass rejected.
Moore questioned whether "the feudal spirit will be ever revived on the Western Continent again," describing it as "a social and political authority founded upon the subjugation of a weaker, by a more powerful race."
He is strongly critical of what he sees as the official “instrumentalisation” of the 1954-1962 war of independence against France; and of what he sees as the continuing subjugation of women in Algerian society.
It is blackness that refuses to accept subjugation, to give up.
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