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Slavery In The Semplica Girl Diaries By George Saunders

Decent Essays

American history has been filled with ups and downs. Happiness and Sadness. Mistakes and success. One of the biggest mistakes in American history is slavery. Much like the United States and slavery, in “The Semplica-Girl Diaries” by George Saunders, women from developing countries are sold to the upper class to be hung by their heads in their front yards as ornaments. “The Semplica-Girls Diaries” is a futuristic echo of early American history through the allusion to slavery and the views that society has about the Semplica Girls. Owning other humans is now considered wrong in the eyes of Americans but back before 1865, slavery is thought of as the norm. The Semplica Girls are young women who are practically slaves themselves. The difference is instead of doing work for their owners, these girls are forced to hang in “fresh white smocks” from string that is attached to their heads. Of course, only the rich have their front yards decorated with Semplica Girls, so the materialistic narrator wants them too. He goes out and buys some, only to have his daughter …show more content…

Slaves are forced to do hard manual work for no pay and horrid living conditions and comparably, SGs experience the same The narrator explains to his daughter and the readers how SGs are “created:” “[The scientists] found way to route microline through brain that does no damage, cause no pain, Techniques uses lasers to make pilot route.” The girls are forced through a humiliating process just to then be hung up in people’s yards as trophies. They may not have to do manual labor, but being degraded all day and all night by being hung up in some person’s yard as objects is equivalent to how Africans are treated in early history. Just as slaves are shown as a sign of money in American history, Semplica Girls are also used to show the richness of the upper

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