The traditional combination of Jacobs in the lives of slave girls has made considerable efforts to classify the events of Harriet Jacobs as the lives of slave girls. For example, these efforts have largely failed. Strict adherence to this belief limits the true perception of the depth of the text and understands only that the author's own story of Jacob is her own, political, but also personal I can not.
The events in the lives of the slave girls of Octavia Butler's Kindred vs. Harriet Jacobs are based on the "Law of the Story of Slaves" that can categorize relatives of Octavia Butler as a slave story. However, compared to the slavery story, it is imaginative and imaginative to let Dana return to the past, as Harina Jacobs's "events in the life of a slave girl". When reading Kindred, people did not really get the experience of slavery, but Dana's feelings when he was involved in the slave era.
"Events in the life of a slave girl", Harriet Jacobs tells about the autobiographical escape from the life and freedom of a girl as a slave. Jacobs talks about her experience as a slave in North Carolina, her heroic escape, and the years she spent hiding and her ultimate freedom. This story is ridiculously easy to read and classic of slave literature. WeStern Civilization Sible, Mary Reynolds is a wonderful choice for people who like myths, telling the story of Tesseus who met Tauren's challenge in Crete's maze. Like historical novels, this is an attractive story, not only full of complex characters and excellent explanations, it is also a window to another time and place. After reading "Sea Bull" you will gain a deep understanding of the world of the ancient Aegean Sea.
Publication of Jacob's Kana Famous Slave Tale "Slave Girl's Lifetime Event" (ed. L. Maria ยท Child, ed., 1861), and an escaped slave Harriet Jacobs as a descendant of the African descent, American activist and writer. Her books were written by myself in England the following year as "a deeper mistake: or a lifetime event of a slave girl" (L. 628, edited in 1862). It may be the only slave story of sexual oppression and oppression of race and state, it was unique in American autobiography of the 19th century. This is the first person of women's struggle with sex and slaves to suppress mothers. Its public purpose was to involve American women in the fight against slavery and racial discrimination and Jacob released it with the help of her editor, the female letter Lydia Maria Child's abolition I came across a big difficulty later.