As long as both are aware of the difference, the treatment of men and women is different. Even in the field of slavery, women and men are not handled in the same way. The story of Harriet Jacobs and Frederick Douglas are very similar, both born with slavery, later becoming the center of thinking beyond repression. When conquering the African American, the two authors stood up and did a lot of wonderful things, especially in their writing. Both Douglas and Jacob experienced various types of slavery that shaped all kinds of their perception and the importance of their freedom.
Harriet Jacobs wrote about women's unique struggle and difficulties in slavery such as sexual abuse. Frederick Douglass wrote about men's unique struggle and suffering in slavery such as castration. Douglas continued to be a famous lecturer and campaigned for Vice President of the Equality Party. Jacobs is still important in the abolishment movement but is a relatively unrecognized person. Both Maya Angelou and Alice Walker are famous African-American writers. They are considered to provide important fictitious and imaginary text about what African Americans mean. They all inspire activists of political and civil rights. They are all awarded the Pulitzer Prize
The slave tale focuses on Frederick Douglas's "American slave, a story of life in Frederick Douglas" and Harriet Jacobs in the life of a slave girl, and family representation is deeply researched. A slave's story is freedom written or said by slaves before biographies and autobiographical stories. Most of them were "to tell" the description edited by abolitionism between 1830 and 1865. Many stories are written entirely by the author.
To present the reality of slavery, some former slaves such as Harriet Tubman, Harriet Jacobs, Frederick Douglas announced the report of slavery and escape from freedom. Lucy Delaney wrote a lawsuit for freedom, including a mother's free case in Missouri. Eventually, about 6,000 former slaves from North America and the Caribbean wrote their life records, of which about 150 people were published as separate books and pamphlets. In general there are 294 stories of slaves believed to exist.