Preview

Linda Brent In Harriet Jacobs Face Challenges

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
141 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Linda Brent In Harriet Jacobs Face Challenges
Dr. Easterday,
Linda Brent in Harriet Jacobs story face challenges with her children, leaving them behind in fear that he Mr Flint would sell them, but wanting to get away from the harsh treatment that she received from him. Even after she left , he search high and low for her, and threatened her grandmother of selling the children. It bother her that Mr.Flint put her children and brother in jail, she thought about returning, but was advise not too. Linda wanted the best for her children, she want them to learn to read and write another suffer as she did under her master. Even after Linda, fled north, she stay in touch with her daughter. I do not think that it set well with her that her son betrayed as a white man to get work and stay free.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    "The motive that these women have on the male characters is a significant one. Gaines eloquently depicts Tante Lou and Miss Emma, both African American women. They were a big part in many of the male characters' lives. Whether it was being house maids at the Henri Pichot's house, or becoming surrogate mothers for our protagonist grant, they were important to those in their immediate community.…

    • 103 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    This book came out when the civil war was started so people read about how hard salves had it, and when the war was over slavery came to an end. This was a big historical event that happened at the time that Harriet Jacobs biography was published. Summary of Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs tells the story of her life as a slave. At an early age both her parents died. Harriet and her brother were raised by their grandmother who was a beloved woman in the town. In Harriet’s early years as a slave, she never realized she was a slave after her early year of childhood is when she knows she was a slave. Harriet whose name in the book is Linda would thwart have repeated sexual advancements made by her master for years. Harriet’s mistress, Mr. Flints wife was very jealous of her because she knows of what would happen between her husband and Harriet. Mr. Flint was a bad man who would use Harriet for his own needs, years of being with her master Harriet was thinking more and more about running away to be free. In her time being there she wanted to get married to a free Blackman but Mr. Flint would not allow…

    • 1949 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Once the Civil War had ended, many rejoiced and thought that African Americans would be free to live out normal lives, but then came the increase of lynching. After the war, the Southern economy was in ruins, and lynching had allowed white southerners to express their hatred and discontent towards the situation and African Americans were the vulnerable targets for their pent-up anger (Notes). In Southern Horrors, Feimster introduces Rebecca Felton, who was a wealthy slave owner, and Ida B. Wells, a slave born women, and how each woman viewed this idea of lynching drastically diverse from each other due to their upbringings.…

    • 1090 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When I hear the word slavery, the only thing that comes to my head is cruelty. I could not even imagine how a human can threat another one like animals, as if they were and inferior or less because of the skin color. The idea of being able to read a book that was written by someone that lived during this years of brutality amazed me. Harriet Jacobs was taught how to read and write by her mothers mistress, this was not common for many of the slaves, and it is the reason why she used the name “Linda” to talk about herself during her stories, because if by any chance her master knew that she could read and write, she would have had the punishment of being whipped and put in jail. During the first chapters of her book we could notice that not all her years as a slave were miserable. In fact the first six years of her life were happy, because she didn’t know she was a slave, once she grew up her innocence started to fade, her days started to turn dark and sad. As described in her book the living conditions were like hell on earth. Slavery not only affected the slaves, it also completely destroyed moral…

    • 1236 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    To take a look in early life of these women. Delilah and Elijah, parents of Harriet Ann Jacobs. They both deceased in her early years of life. She and her younger brother was left to be raised by their maternal grandmother, Molly Horniblow. Harriet was born in Edenton, North Carolina in the fall of 1813. At the age of six, Harriet was unaware that she was born into slavery and that she was the property of Margaret Horniblow. Before the death of her relatively kind mistress, she was taught how to read, write, and sew. Harriet had hoped to be freed by Margaret, but when Harriet was only eleven, Margaret suddenly died and she was bequeathed to Dr. James Norcom. By willed, she was bided upon a decision that initiated a lifetime of suffering and…

    • 487 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Harriet Jacobs uses an almost complete opposite approach to her autobiography. She attempts to make this story impersonal by using a different name, other than her own, to be the main character. She is also slightly on the secretive side when it comes to telling what events actually took place in slavery. Jacobs usually gives brief summaries of what happens to her, but the main focus is the impact the events have on her personally. Unlike Douglass, Jacobs focuses on the lives of women in slavery. Where Douglass discusses the phyisical limits pushed on male slaves, Jacobs tells of the emotional damage that happens to any slave girl as soon as she is about 14 years old.…

    • 348 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    During the 1800s, slaves received treatment comparable to that of livestock. They were mere possessions of white men stripped of almost every last bit of humanity in them. African-Americans were constricted to this state of mind by their owners vicious treatment, but also the practice of keeping them uneducated. Keeping the slaves illiterate hindered them from understanding the world around them. Slave owners knew this. The slaves who were able to read and write always rebelled more against their masters. Frederick Douglass, author of "A Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass," and Harriet Jacobs, author of "Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl," were prime examples. Both slaves had been taught how read and write at a young age, and both gained their freedom by escaping to the northern states. What they had learned also helped them stay free while in the northern states after the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 which left no slave truly free. The literate slaves thought with a more free mind and developed a sense of self-identity and denied the identity of a slave. Literate slaves caught on to the immorality and injustice of slavery on black people. Another problem slave owners had with literate slaves was the potential for them to educate other slaves and give them thoughts of escaping or helping other slaves escape. Frederick Douglas and Harriet Jacobs both wrote of this in their books.…

    • 1757 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Harriet Jacobs was a slave girl who lost her mother at a very early age. Since then she lived in her master’s house until adulthood. Her reactions to her own experiences as a slave girl (in Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl) show her hatred for slavery and her immense dislike for people that involved themselves in this malpractice. Jacobs saw slavery as dehumanizing. In the seventh chapter of her narrative, The Lover, Jacobs expresses her hatred for her slave master who deprived her of her right to love and be loved as a human. From this chapter we see that slave owners were wicked people who took advantage of the weakness of the black race and treated them as lower class creatures that did not deserve any good treatment from the whites. Besides ill treatment, slaves could not be sure of their “tomorrow,” as they could be bought up at any time from one slave owner to the other. This continuous movement from one owner to the other shows that slaves could not be sure of their happiness and in…

    • 1192 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    Enslaved blacks were aware that freedom was possible in the northern United States because they would listen to conversations during dinner time, when they would act like they were not paying attention. In the chapter titled “Diaspora Africans and Slavery” the author Azavedo describes some of the laws that upheld slavery. One of the most effective being the U.S. Constitution which allowed for the importation of Africans to last, as well as the Constitutions failure to recognize African Americans as citizens. Azavedo goes on to say, “Literacy and slavery were incompatible, of course. Education was denied to slaves because it portended their freedom” (Azavedo, 99). Educating slaves was seen as a threat, because if they were literate than they could read the advertisements in the papers about other runaways and learn of their methods. Knowledge is power, and if educated slaves could forge their freedom papers as well as seek the teachings from the bible then they would be tempted to flee for a better life. Education is yet another method through which slaves could achieve agency. The ability for slaves to gain knowledge and use it for their betterment is an example of agency. Harriet kept tabs on her family in hopes of one day going back to rescue them. She was able to first…

    • 2012 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    Elijah is an eleven year old boy boy who lives in Canada's settlement of Buxton. He is the first born child to be free from slavery, and because of this he is very special in the settlement. He was born to former slaves Mr. & Mrs. Freeman. Elijah's parents show up in the story sometimes but not all of the time. Ma freeman does not want Elijah to become a fra-gile boy. While his father wants him to learn to be hard worker and learn right from wrong.Along with his parents he has other important factors such as: Cooter, Mrs. Holton, Mrs. Chloe, Mr. Leroy, and The preacher. Cooter is Elijah's Best friend. He is always there for Elijah and they are the best of friends. Mrs. Holton is a wealthy women who lives in the settlement while her husband is still a slave. Mr. Leroy is very hard working man. He is also a freed slave who hopes to get his wife and daughter back from America. The preacher isn't your average preacher. He does not give words or wisdom at church he just thinks he knows everything. Mrs. Chloe is a lady that Elijah meets in the way to America. She just wants the best for her family and she wants to be out of slavery. Elijah's trip to Buxton was very unexpected Mrs. Holton found out that while her husband was in slavery he was killed. She was going to buy him back with money she saved, but since Mr. Leroy wanted his family back she gave the money to him. Mr. Leroy is very grateful and rejoiced. After friending out about his money…

    • 499 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although they are still of a lower class, the other blacks did not seem to struggle as much in their lives as the protagonist. Ellison created this character to criticize slavery, and show that even when slavery is abolished and slaves are freed, they still cannot resume to normal, everyday lives that white people have. The legacy of slavery is engraved into the paths of people like the protagonist, and no course of action can allow them to better their…

    • 661 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Harriet Tubman personally helped slaves escape because she wanted her family back her friends back, and her dignity back. Harriet Tubman was the leader of the slaves, believes in slaves, and she has a huge heart over slaves. When Harriet Tubman first escaped she had to leaves parents behind because if she didn’t she would get caught using too many people escaping. It was her first time escaping. She was impressive and cleaver at it. Though she was going to come back for them soon. Tubman also helped her brothers escape. The first time Tubman and her brothers got caught. The second time, they escaped without being caught. Harriet Tubman made disguises for slaves such as, grass on their bodies, masks to hide their faces, and special clothing which helped a lot. Harriet Tubman guided tons of slaves because she did not want them to be capture or hurt so she got them safe. She used secret paths, secret messages on special walls, and thousands of routes. The best way she made escapes for slaves was the Underground Railroad. That had more routes than other places of escaping. If Harriet Tubman saw a slave that was hurt she would never leave them behind and just take their life away from them even if it was sacrificing her life. Harriet Tubman said to herself she would never lose a slave again even it was risking her life for theirs. It was her only goal to get the slaves freedom back, her family’s freedom back, and of course…

    • 274 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Harriet Tubman was born a slave named Araminta Ross during the year of 1820. She was able to escape twenty-nine years later to start the Underground Railroad and help other slaves escape. Also, because she was an abolitionist before the Civil War, she became a spy for the Union Army. Because of all her great accomplishments, it was revealed that Harriet Tubman would be the new face of the twenty-dollar bill. (Biography)…

    • 761 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Harriet Jacobs

    • 1175 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Through her story we had the opportunity of learning what is was like to be a woman faced with human tyranny. They had to endure a whole different sort of oppression than what the male slaves experienced; the difference being that of sexual exploitation, young female slaves being raped and sometimes impregnated by their masters. While reading her narrative I realized that this was a part of slavery that I hadn’t really heard much about. I knew it existed, but to actually read her story was eye opening, and brought the degradation of slavery to an in-depth level for me. To read about the filth that Dr. Flint would say to her when she was only a young girl sickened me. To know that just because she was a slave that he felt it was his right to degrade her and strip away her innocence was a reflection of the reality of what slave girls went through. There was almost nothing they could do, who could come to their rescue? Jacobs’ plead to Dr. Flint’s wife for protection and instead of pity on the young girls, she became jealous and enraged. Jealous at the fact that her husband is choosing to be with slave girls, who were considered to be less than human, then be with her.…

    • 1175 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Frederick Douglass

    • 3364 Words
    • 14 Pages

    Common among slaves was being forced to work long hours; Harriet was no exception. The long hours deprived Harriet from forging a motherly bond with her son. Douglass (2002) recalled the only time he spent with his mother was when she would walk 12 miles after dark to lie next to him at night (SparkNotes Editors, 2002). At a young age, Douglass was separated from his mother and placed in the care of his maternal grandmother, Betsey Bailey. Several years later, when told that his mother had died,…

    • 3364 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Better Essays

Related Topics