РефератыИностранный языкBiBiography And History Harriet Jacob

Biography And History Harriet Jacob

Biography And History: Harriet Jacob’s The Life Of A Slave Girl Essay, Research Paper


Biography and History: Harriet Jacob’s The Life of a Slave Girl


To be a good writer, you must posess a careful balance between detachment


and association, a delicate waltz where you are not so wrapped up in the events


of a story that it alienates the reader, and yet not so far separated from the


subject matter that the readers cannot get into it. This is espectially the


case in an autobiographical narrative. In this case, it is very difficult to


detach yourself from the main subject matter, that is, yourself. Yet it must


remain a story, and the story at its heart is a reconstruction of facts from the


memory of the author. In the case of Harriet Jacobs, it was also important that


she make sure the readers understood slavery from a woman’s perspective. The


hardships she had to endure not only entailed the work and the punishments, but


also the sexual aspect of being a slave-girl. Her task is difficult, because in


order for the reader to really understand her position as a woman and a slave,


she must make the story extremely personal. If it is too personal, however, the


reader looses sight of the bigger picture, and does not relate all these


hardships to the condition of the general female slave. She accomplishes this


in two ways, through her writing style, and the writing content.


The style that the novel is written varies from a dialogue to a narrative,


depending on the subject matter being written about. For example, the dialogue


where Mrs. Flint confronts Linda (Jocobs) and asks her what has been going on


with her husband is handled very effectively, because as a conversation between


two people, we are able to pick up on the nuances of meaning. Also, it makes the


situation seem to the reader as very exhilarating, because we don’t know what’s


going to happen next. Two paragraphs later, though, the story has turned back


into narrative, because Jacobs is trying to examine the entire situation in her


present day, as a free woman. She has to be detached from the conversation in


order for her to draw any conclusions. The conclusion she draws is that even


though they are in different circumstances, (Linda is a slave and Mrs. Flint is


her mistress), they both have a shared problem as women — that is, the problems


of infedelity. This general topic cannot be dealt with effectively unless it is


done at a distance, looking back with the experience she has gained.


Jacobs does this a lot — she takes her own present-day experiences and


places them in the framework of her past. When she gives us an account of the


Slaves’ New Year’s Day, she addresses the readers personally, whom are all free


men and women. First she gives us the facts of the matter: the auction block,


the anxious waiting before families are separated. Then she compares it to the


present. In order to shock her readers

and make this story hit closer to home,


she asks us to compare our New Year’s Day with the slaves’. While we are


partying and enjoying ourselves, the slaves await the day when they will be sold.


Mothers fear that their children will be taken from them, rebellious slaves


fear they will be beaten. We just don’t understand what slavery is unless we


are given a direct contrast like this.


Another method to get the readers to truly understand her problems is to


try to compare feelings with situations. For example, at one point her style


changes to rhetorical questions, aimed to catch the reader off-guard and make


them think, not just read and comprehend. After she tells Mr. Flint about her


intentions to marry a free black man, he tells her that she will never marry him,


nor will she ever be free. This is written in a dialogue-style. Then, it


quickly turns personal: she asks the readers, “Did you ever hate? I hope not.


I never did but once…” She later accuses the readers of an almost blissful


ignorance to this point: “But, O, ye happy women, whose purity has been


sheltered from shildhood, who have been free to choose the objects of your


affection, whose homes are protected by law, do not judge the poor desolate


slave girl too severley!” In this manner, she asks the readers to forgive her


for her sexual actions. Naturally, this is not really necessary, but it is an


affective writing tool to get us to look on our own lives as easy in comparison


to hers.


As a writer, Jacobs has to make herself look more human and real to the


readers, because they come into the book with pre-conceieved notions about


slavery. She does this by writing occasional sarcastic comments, the kind that


we all make in our lives. When her grandmother lends her mistress the money she


has saved, she can only hope to get it back based on the word of the woman.


“The honor of a slaveholder to a slave!” she remarks sarcastically. What is


important to Jacobs is that the people reading the story really understand


what’s going on. It isn’t enough that they be sorry for her, they must be


enraged at the injustices. She chooses these small sections out of her life


because she feels they will be the most influential over the reader. It is


supposed to be a persuasive story, not some self-pitying account of her poor’


life. “I draw no imaginary pictures of southern homes. I am telling you the


plain truth,” she explains. There is no intentional deceit in the chapters that


she writes, because that would work against her. Her message is simple, she


explains it in a dialogue with her brother:


“He grew vexed, and asked if poverty and hardships with freedom, were not


preferable to our treatment in slavery. Linda,’ he continued, we are


dogs here;


foot-balls, cattle, every thing that’s mean. No, I will not stay. Let


them bring


me back. We don’t die but once.’”

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