Slaves were constantly in danger for even the smallest actions against their masters. Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs looks into the life of Linda Brent, which is Harriet Jacobs’s fake name. Slavery was the basis of Linda’s long suffering. Harriet uses fear, harassment, and loss to demonstrate how slavery hurts many women. Linda faced and witnessed many hardships as a woman in slavery. One of the first moments she witnessed a great loss she stated, “On one of these sale days, I saw a mother lead seven children to the auction-block. She knew that some of them would be taken from her; but they took all,” (III, 17). The quote is particularly important because it shows how many people lost those they loved not through …show more content…
Dr. Flint sexually harassed Linda repeatedly. This hurt Linda because she slowly had her innocence tore away from her at such a young age. An important line in reference to her situation was, “But Dr. Flint swore he would kill me, if I was not as silent as the grave,” (V, 27). She was alone and had no one to safely confide in. In addition to Dr. Flint’s verbal harassment, he used many threats. A prime example would be, “I shuddered; but I was constrained to listen, while he talked of his intention to give me a home of my own, and make a lady out of me,”(X, 47). This in itself seems harmless. However, the point made here is that he never intends to let her go. She will forever be his to do as he pleases. This hurts because she will be forced to suffer his constant advances on her till he grows bored and cruel or till her own death. This also gives the idea that if she were to give in she could bore his children whom he could treat with cruelty as a means to keep her under his thumb at absolutely all costs. Later on Dr. Flint’s tactics change along with the birth of Linda’s child. He uses the birth of her son as an advantage to control her. He will offer to sell her children when she disobeys or upsets him (XIV, 66). The key point is that he instills the fear of losing her child. She is more likely to be docile when ordered about, if
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs strongly speaks to its readers by describing the brutalities of slavery and the way slave owners can destroy peaceful lives. After reading and rereading the story have noticed certain things regarding how Jacobs tries to educate her readers and her intended audience which is the women of the North. As if we do not know enough about how terrible slavery is, this story gives detailed examples of the lives of slaves and provokes an incredible amount of emotions. She uses several tactics in her writing to reach her desired audience and does so very well.
The life of a slave woman is far more complex than that of a slave man, although understandably equal in hardships, the experience for a woman is incredibly different. The oppression that women have faced throughout their lives in the struggle to even be considered equal to men is more than evident in slavery, not only because they were thought of as lesser but in some ways many women actually believed it to be true. The experiences that Linda Brent, pseudonym for the author Harriet A. Jacobs, went through in her life story in Incidents In The Life Of A Slave Girl prove that the difficulties for slave women were more than significant in many different cases. For Linda Brent, her life had been a constant fight since she was six years old
As a woman, the narrator must be protected and controlled and kept away from harm. This seemed to be the natural mindset in the 19th century, that women need to have guidance in what they do, what decisions they make, and what they say. John calls her a “little goose”(95) and his “little girl”(236), referring her to a child, someone who needs special attention and control. His need for control over her is proven when she admits that her husband is “careful and loving and hardly lets me stir without special direction”(49). John has mentally restrained the speaker’s mind, she is forced to hide her anxieties, fears and be submissive, to preserve the happiness of their marriage. When the narrator attempts to speak up, she is bogged down and made guilty of her actions. Her husband makes her feel guilty for asking, he says, “‘I beg of you, for my sake and for our child’s sake, as well as your own, that you will never for one instant let that idea enter your mind!’”(225-226). By making her feel guilty for her illness, John has trapped her mentally from speaking up about it, convincing her that she must be more careful about her actions. Men often impose the hardships placed upon women during this era. They are often the people reassuring them of their “womanly” duties, and guiding them
When Linda was a child, she was not treated like a normal slave. This was due to the help of a grandmother, who was once a slave but earned so much respect and was loved by her master and mistress that she
For her safety, Jacobs changed the names of all the characters and she is represented by the name Linda. This was to help her steer clear from facing severe consequences for writing a story about her life. The publication can be classified as social history because it discusses the major issue of slavery, based off of personal stories mainly about the author but, also about the people that associated with her. In one of the chapters, Linda describes an incident in which a slave that she knew was tortured because he attempted to run away. For several days, he was locked up in a cotton gin and was kept in there till he died. A slave that was sent to bring him water found his body rotting away. This occurrence helped publicize and back up the atrocity of slavery that is a major issue. After Linda ran away, she sent letters to her master and her grandmother that appeared to be mailed from New York. This was to make her master believe that she was staying there and not laying low in her grandmother’s attic. Linda’s master was obsessed
In the office he had made verbal threats and threaten Linda saying that she does not deserve to live and he swears he is going to kill her. From his statement about his parents and memories about his past relationship most of his anger pointed more and more towards Linda.
Harriet A. Jacobs Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl is an autobiography written under the name of Linda Brent. This autobiography is a detailed account of her life or lack thereof. I use the term lack thereof because Harriet Jacobs was raised by her grandmother due to her mother dying at a young age. Harriet was taught to read and write as a young slave girl by her mistress.
Harriet Jacobs’s Incidents in the life of a Slave Girl allows Harriet Jacobs, speaking through the narrator, Linda Brent, to reveal her reasons for making public her personal story of enslavement, degradation, and sexual exploitation. Although originally ignored by critics, who often dismissed Jacobs ' story as a fictional account of slavery, today it is reported as the first novel narrative by an ex-slave that reveals the unique brutalities inflicted on enslaved women. Gabby Reyes
This shows that Flint thinks that Chester is trying to help when he isn’t. Chester is trying to get Flint’s invention for the food bar version 8.0. Flint doesn’t realize that he actually needs him, but it helps Chester because then he is making more money.
Harriet Jacobs' words in Incidents in the Life of A Slave Girl clearly suggests that the life as a slave girl is harsh and unsatisfactory. In this Composition, Jacobs is born a slave, never to be freed. She struggles through life in many instances making life seem impossible. The author's purpose is to state to the people what happened during slavery times in the point of view of a slave. Her life is so harsh that she even hides from her master for 7 years in a cramped space in the top of a shed without any room to walk. The theme of the story is a statement on how slavery was a much harder way of life than many people may have thought. Many people during these times thought that slaves were happy where they were and that their lives
Harriet Jacobs, in her narrative, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, was born into slavery in the south. While her youth contained “six years of happy childhood,” a few tragedies and mistresses later, Jacobs spent many years in pain under the possession of her cruel five-year-old mistress, Emily Flint, and Emily’s father, Dr. Flint. Once able to obtain freedom, Jacobs spent most of her life working for the Anti-Slavery office in New York, in hope that one day she could make a difference in the world. “She sought to win the respect and admiration of her readers for the courage with which she forestalled abuse and for the independence with which she chose a lover rather than having one forced on her” (Jacobs 921). Linda Brett, the pseudonym that Jacobs uses to narrate her life story, endures the harsh behavior women slaves were treated with in the south during the nineteenth century. The dominant theme of the corruptive power and psychological abuse of slavery, along with symbolism of good and evil, is demonstrated throughout her narrative to create a story that exposes the terrible captivity woman slaves suffered. The reality of slavery in the past, versus slavery today is used to reveal how the world has changed and grown in the idea of racism and neglect.
The impact of sexual harassment can take many shapes in its victims and oftens varies based on the duration of the treatment and the circumstances surrounding the abuse. In Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, author Harriet Jacobs, under the pseudonym, Linda Brent, describes her experience of sexual harassment as a teenager under her master, Dr. Flint. Through years of alienation and unyielding persistence of her master, Linda finds herself living a nightmare. She must make heart wrenching decisions to protect herself against the serious danger of a powerful man while losing her innocence and faith in others. The treatment Linda faces during her enslavement effects all aspects of her life, including
Slavery was a horrible institution that dehumanized a race of people. Female slave bondage was different from that of men. It wasn't less severe, but it was different. The sexual abuse, child bearing, and child care responsibilities affected the females's pattern of resistance and how they conducted their lives. Harriet Jacobs' Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, demonstrates the different role that women slaves had and the struggles that were caused from having to cope with sexual abuse.
. .(The woman screamed) Gone! All gone! Why don’t God kill me?" Linda explains that things like this happen daily, even hourly. This is only a small piece of the torture it was to be a woman in slavery. Linda’s master often made perverted comments to her in which she expressed as to filthy to tell. He began to fill her mind with awful thoughts and words. He often slapped Linda and kicked her around. He was constantly threatening her and her life explaining that he would never sell her and that she would be in their damily as long as he had an heir. When Linda became pregnant with the son of a white man, he became very angry and he constantly reminded her that her baby was to be his property, like a piece of land to be bought. When she had the boy she named Benjamin, he was premature and she became very ill. She refused to let anyone send for a doctor, because the only doctor that could treat her was Dr. Flint. Finally when they thought she would die they sent for her master. He treated her and she refused him as much as possible, but she lived and so did her little Benny, although sometimes she wished he would’ve died. Almost three years later she had a daughter who she called Ellen which angered him even more and when Benny began to run to cling to his mother when he was striking her, Dr. Flint knocked the child all the way across the room nearly killing him.
Linda Brent whose life story is narrated in the book “Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl” is an intelligent, a persistent and courageous, a caring and loving person as well as her relative including her grandmother, her father, brother, uncles and aunty about whom she talks in the book display these qualities just like any human beings contrary to the believe of slaveholders who think that black slaves do not have feelings, and treat slaves like animal, even less than animal.