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Comparing Harriet Douglas And Anne Douglass And Harriet Ann Jacobs

Decent Essays

The difference between black men’s writings and black women’s writing is seen in this writing. Men wrote to talk about heroism and the freedom they gained, while women try to show link their writing to family and community (Stover 133-154). The difference between Douglass and Harriet Ann Jacobs can also be seen when Cutter asserted “While Douglass uses gaps in his text to maintain authority over the actual narrative, Jacobs creates gaps or deficiencies in her text to disperse the author's authority, sharing it with her readers” (Cutter 224). Jacobs asks her readers for their sympathy because they don’t know what she and many other slaves had to experience. Stover shows us that Harriet Ann Jacobs “describes herself as a victim of circumstance, pleading for pity and assistance, and as a discerning actor who exercises significant control over nearly impossible condition” (Stover 939). She was able to bring light because no one really talked about the sexual abuse that black women experienced. “Jacobs exposes the assumptions of abolitionist discourse, and ancillary sentimental forms, not by definitively rejecting them, but by elaborating them from within.” (Nudelman 941). Yellin says that “Jacobs's book centers on the figure of a woman struggling to break her own chains” (Nudelman 944). Jacobs try to show the female suffering and the political authority of white women and, “Jacobs and Child agree that the narrative's purpose is to prompt the political agency of white

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