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Incidents In The Life Of A Slave Girl By Harriet Ann Jacobs

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Reader Response One

When someone mentions slavery in American history, one may imagine hard working African Americans planting cotton or plowing fields in the scorching heat. Others may recall learning about the Underground Railroad or how slaves would escape their cruel masters and flee to the North. While both ideas were true, not many people think of the harsh lives of African American women who were often treated worse than their male counterparts, both physically and mentally. Harriet Ann Jacobs, an American author and former slave, challenges the normal stereotypes we often encounter when discussing American slavery in her autobiography, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Furthermore, she gives a critical voice for slave women and writes to encourage the abolishment of slavery with true accounts from her life. While in today’s society, slavery is something mostly see as a taboo, the historical context of which Harriet was present in had a very controversial view over slavery. Many Northerners …show more content…

All the way from from sexual abuse to the critical physical and mental impact caused by having children, and eventually losing them at the hands of their masters, enslaved women truly had one of the most unjustified positions in society. Starting around the tender age of fifteen, girls were subjected to many new forms of torture from their masters. Sexual harassment, rape, and even pregnancy were all common results for slave women of all ages, a horrible trial men would rarely go through. Although work for all slaves was brutal and harsh, masters who made their slaves pregnant would often joyously imagine the new profits they would be earning. Meanwhile the slave girls would be beaten and threatened by their jealous mistresses, who often had no power over their husbands

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