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Sojourner Truth: A Feminist Analysis

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Many women struggle with the concept of the “glass ceiling”, meaning that for many of our Nations working women, they have yet to gain the same employment rights as men. However, America has made a complete turnaround in regards to 1827. Sojourner Truth who was born a slave, faced not only the inequality of races but more prominently the inequality of the sexes. In her speech at the 1851 Women’s Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio, Truth examines gender inequality. This critical approach of feminism not only made Truth a face of the feminist movement, but also enabled Truth to become one of the first black women slaves to demand not only equality in regards to race, but also to that of gender. Sojourner Truth was born in 1797 as Isabella, …show more content…

He recounted Truth’s idea that men often fear that if woman were to be granted rights, they would overstep and take advantage of the new rights they had just been granted. Truth quickly puts these fears to rest by stating that “…For we can’t take more than our pint’ll hold” (Truth, 802). She suggests that women will not take on more than they can handle or are given. Much of Robinson’s version is concerned less with women and more with the male audience. Robinson observe’s that equality of the sexes is not a necessary precondition for women’s rights. “You need not be afraid to give us our rights for fear we will take too much,” …Why children, if you have woman’s rights give it to her and you will feel better. You will have your own rights, and they won’t be so much trouble (Greyser, 290).” Truth makes it a point to allude to the fact that she doesn’t necessarily want the same rights as the men, but that she is only fighting to obtain some of the same …show more content…

Bevin Romans further explores this idea by stating that “There are a plethora of ways in which women and men can use Truth’s rhetoric to establish equality among the genders (Romans, 14)”. While the battle for equality among the sexes is still an ongoing issue for many women, Truth has made it easier for these women to be able to speak out against the corruption and injustice of equality. However it was not an easy journey for Truth to be heard. Racial opposition occurred from other women who thought that their battle for equality of the sexes might be misconstrued with abolitionist’s causes (Romans, 12). She was befriended by Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, but disagreed with them on many issues, most notably Stanton's threat that she would not support the black vote if women were denied it. Although she remained supportive of women's suffrage throughout her life, Truth distanced herself from the increasingly racist language of the women's groups (PBS). In her speech at the convention in Akron, Ohio, women were concerned that “every newspaper in the land will have our cause mixed with abolition and niggers, and we shall be utterly denounced (Ernest).” Also, that just because she was a black woman, she was still entitled to the same rights as a white woman. No matter how slim those rights may

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