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Black Families During Slavery And The Role Black Women

Decent Essays

Marissa Brown
Professor S. Hoffman
African Americans During Slavery
5 December 2014
Black Families During Slavery and the Role Black Women Played
In 1619, when slavery first began it was clear early on that it wouldn’t be a positive experience for its victims. The victims, typically people of African American decent, were not afforded any rights as human beings. They were excluded from the political system (not allowed to hold offices or vote); they were excluded from holding jobs of quality and forced to be slaves. Even as slaves they were denied many of the basic needs that were plentiful for many of America’s Caucasian citizens. African Americans as a whole had a limited amount of options during that time but the African American female slave carried not only the burden of being black but also being a female. Many of the experiences that black females had during this time differed a small bit from what their male counterparts might have experienced. I’ll explore the life of the black woman during slavery and her fight to have a normal life. The relationship between a female slave and her master wasn’t always a relationship built only on hard work in the fields or serving in the home. In some instances slave women were forced to comply with sexual advances by their masters regularly. Attempting to resist these advances often led to undesirable consequences that often included beatings and other forms of physical punishment. Because of these harsh and brutal consequences

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