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Comparing The Book 'And Arn T I A Woman?'

Decent Essays

In the book, “The Incidents Life of a Slave”, Harriet Jacobs shared her experiences working on a plantation, exposing the reality of which African American women endured more immoral suffering throughout the era of slavery. Being viewed as twice the property, they had no liberty over their motherhood and womanhood; their submission towards the slave masters could never be rebelled against without the price of punishment or death. In "And Arn't I a Woman?”, Sojourner Truth’s compare the similarities between African American women, Caucasian women, and men as well as the lack of respect they receive due to developing both female and African American identities. She exposed that most slaves, male and female, did tediously difficult field work, working for long hours with little to no food. In addition to the excruciating physical labor, they suffered sexual, mental, and emotion abuse which caused irreversible trauma. Harriet Jacobs writes in her book, “he peopled …show more content…

And arn’t I a woman…I have as much muscle as any man, and can do as much work as any man”. Enslaved African American women were farther down the social class than Caucasian women and enslaved men. As a woman, she never was given chivalry a normal woman would receive. She never experienced the treatment of gentlemanly behavior although she was a woman; she contradicts the expectation on how a woman should be treated by acknowledging her identity as a woman and absence of the treatment. She also expressed how the challenging work, performances, and rights of women of color are ignored. Slave women had to do their family's cooking, cleaning, and washing when they got back to their cabins after working long hours on the field. Despite being able to compete with a man in the diligences of labor, she could never measure to the amount of respect given to him for preforming the same

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