A story of slaves is a story that tells slaves and what they experienced. 6000 former slaves from North America are talking about their lives in the 18th and 19th centuries. About 150 stories have been published as separate books or articles, and most slaves were born during the last year of slavery or the civil war. Some slaves are talking about experience in farms, cities, small farms. The story of slaves is one of the only ways people understand the lifestyle of slaves today, what they do everyday, and the way they have experienced it.
Harriet Jacobs (1813-1897) used the pseudonym event "Life of slave girl" for Linda Brent to be a women's slave tale most widely read in American history. In her story, Jacobs explained the woman and her mother by explaining in detail the sexual harassment and abuse in Edwardton, North Carolina as a woman 's slave and explaining what she eventually escaped. After all, her story is victory and proof of her spirit. In general, this is an important literary and key source for young readers to better understand the many aspects of slavery, especially women's slave experience. It contains many contradictions that contradict the assumptions that exist in slavery. Unlike many of her colleagues, Harriet is neither struck nor physically abused. She learned to read and write, but she did not notice herself being a slave in the first six years of her life. Her family is very important to her, she has a lifelong relationship with her grandmother and other families.
Harriet Anne Jacobs, born as a slave in Edenton, North Carolina, is the daughter of slave daughters Delila and Daniel Jacobs Harriet Jacobs. The most famous was edited by the white abolitionist Lydia Maria Child in her autobiography "The life event of a slave girl" and was published in 1852. Story After her mistress passed away, "Dr. Flint", in her young life she was considered a young girl, she met Flint 's constant sexual assault in 1835. Lint's family is still nearby and lived in the attic for several years to stay near his son, but he flew in 1842 and was able to meet with children and live in Rochester, New York There was. CyberNetwork Jacobs wrote autobiography with the help of the white abolitionist Amy Post, but he was still chased by slave catcher and fled to Massachusetts.