Jacobs
During slavery, slaves were not allowed to own houses, money or businesses because they were property themselves. After reading Harriet Jacobs’ “Incident in the Life of a Slave Girl, Seven Years Concealed” I found that her family was very privileged to be slaves. Jacobs’ job while being a slave was to be the play mate of a little white girl. She was treated the same way the little girl was treated, they wore the same . . .
Seeing her father, mother and grandmother receiving respect from others empowered her to have confidence in herself regardless that she is slave. Even Jacobs herself states that she did not know she was a slave before the age of six. Compared to other slave children she was living the good life. Her grandmother, a slave herself, lived in her own home . Although she was a slave, she still knew that she was a woman and he will not do anything she doesn’t want him to do. Jacobs’ confidence and self-esteem remained unchanged when Mrs. Flint terrorized her in the night, and when Dr. clothes, they ate the same food and played with the same toys. The grandmother’s mistress was a kind enough woman to let her keep a her home and her business along with the money she made. By Jacobs seeing this she developed the mind of a person that is not a slave. Without the strength of her family Harriet Jacobs would have never grown up to believe that she didn’t have to take her master’s abuse and she wouldn’t think she deserved the same treatment as her white counterparts. owned her own business, which is unheard of for a slave.
Common topics in this essay:
Seven Concealed, Dr Flint, Harriet Jacobs, Jacobs Development, girl treated, harriet jacobs, dr flint, |