Women of today and in the past face many different challenges. As we learned from my last essay all women don’t experience things the same. As we should now know this view of feminism is intersectionality. Which this concept was developed by Kimberle Crenshaw. Intersectionality covers different views of women’s lives, such as sexuality, gender race, education, religion and etc... In class Prof. Ribbons you had your own outline; you did a perfect job with your setup. We focused on race, social class, and religion/tradition. In my class I would focus on race, education, and income/social class. Now this is my reasoning behind this; I personal race always comes first. If you take away all the education and finances, an individual always …show more content…
Every when the time of very harsh discrimination towards blacks started to lighting up the black women still got the end of the stick. Sojourner Truth said it best in her short story “Ain’t I a Woman”. Truth stated “That man over there says that women need to be helped into carriages, and lifted over ditches, and to have the best place everywhere. Nobody ever helps me into carriages, or over mud-puddles, or gives me any best place! And ain't I a woman?” (Sojourner Truth, Aint I aWoman) During this time I guess men tired treating women with a little more respect, but Sojourner stated she didn’t get the same treatment. I feel this was because of her race. This further proves all women are not the same just because they’re women. Sojourner Truth was a woman, on top of being an African- American woman, her treatment most likely wouldn’t be the same. Sojourner could even argue that these acts of sheltering or babying women are only oppressing them, not getting equality. I got this evidence from two more of her quotes from this text. First, “I could work as much and eat as much as a man - when I could get it - and bear the lash as well!” (Sojourner Truth, Aint I aWoman). This quote explains she can do anything a man plus the physical abuse the men were giving. In the second, I have borne thirteen children, and seen most all sold off to slavery, and when I cried out with my mother's grief, none but Jesus heard me! And ain't I …show more content…
Both men and women face a vary of challenges with pay gaps, and other social class treatments but women still are beneath men periods. Throughout Toni Morrison’s novel “The Bluest Eye” she introduced the challenges both men and women in poverty faced, but the men were still the breadwinners of the family. Also in Alice Walkers text the “ The Color Purple”. Walker tells a tales about a black Woman struggling with poverty, and abuse. During the time of The Color Purple, most black men own the property and were the workers. Also, females still were defined to tending to the home and children. Slavery may not have been a issue at this time but black Woman had a new master in it was the black men. The character Sophia also was forced to work for a white Woman, similar to Morrison’s story. In both texts the white women were the majority due to social class and race. Morrison’s is more in-site with this quote “ White men taking such good care of they women, and they all dressed up in big clean houses with bathtubs right in the same room with the toilet. Them pictures gave me a lot of pleasure, but it made coming home hard, and looking at Cholly hard” (Toni Morrison, The Bluest Eye). In this quote Pauline compares her life with white women onscreen. This makes her have envy for a feeling that she will never feel, simply because of her income and living
During the 1900’s, women, specifically black women, were considered to be property of men in the United States, especially down south, in states such as Florida and Georgia. Legally, women had no voice. For example, if a woman was abused by her husband, the court system would not acknowledge it even if it did really happen. In the article “Sexism in the Early 1900’s”, Becca Woltemath states that “…a woman’s job is to take care of the house and to bear children. She’s no good for anything else. She’s just a simple thinker.” Women were forced into submission and there was nothing they could do about it. In the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston shows the
Mary Rowlandson lived a normal Christian life in the colonies up to the raid in her town. The interesting part comes in when she is a White captive which switches the authority to the Native Americans. While comparing to Sojourner Truth is born into slavery and the authority has always been the White masters. Within their society, there was a difference of individual oppression that is influenced on how their masters treated them. In Mary Rowlandson’s narrative, it stated “I turned homeward again, and met with my master. He showed me the way to my son”. This emphasizes on the idea that Native Americans were not savages or abusive towards Rowlandson because her master would allow her to go see her son. And when she could not figure the way there, the master guided her back to her son. The Native Americans were more respect towards Rowlandson because she was an English woman. She was valuable to them and could be traded for something they needed. While Sojourner Truth experienced the ruthless from her master. In her narrative, it states “ he gave her the cruelest whipping she was ever tortured with. He whipped her till the flesh was deeply lacerated, and the blood streamed from her wounds–and the scars remain to the present day, to testify to the fact.” Truth endured the pain and was mistreated like every other slave. As an individual, her master could oppress Truth because he ultimately has the power over her and that relationship is accepted in their societal norms, therefore Truth did not have the strength to go against the Master. Sojourner Truth was oppressed as an individual because her master had left scars of her beating, which would remind Truth that she was nothing, but
The title of this book comes from the inspiring words spoken by Sojourner Truth at the 1851, nine years prior to the Civil War at a Women’s Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio. In Deborah Grays White, Ar’n’t I a woman her aim was to enrich the knowledge of antebellum black women and culture to show an unwritten side of history of the American black woman. Being an African- American and being a woman, these are the two principle struggles thrown at the black woman during and after slavery in the United States. Efforts were made by White scholars in 1985 to have a focus on the female slave experience. Deborah Gray White explains her view by categorizing the hardships and interactions between the female slave and the environment in which the
Both documents, Sojourner Truth's "Ain't I a Woman?" and "A Black Feminist Statement: The Combahee River Collective", deal with the issues faces by women during each time period. However, they do not only focus on the discrimination of women; they focus on the discrimantion of black women. Sojourner Truth and The Combahee River Collective took the issue that were being dealt with by other women and organzations and brought a bigger issue to the picture. Feminist during these times were focused on helping women, white women, so these particular feminist raised a whole other issue to the table. The biggest difference between these two documents is the time they were each written or spoken. Sojourner spoke in the mid-1800s,
In a time period when women were considered inferior, as were blacks, it was unimaginable the horrors a black woman in the south had to endure during this period. African women were slaves and subject to the many horrors that come along with being in bondage, but because they were also women, they were subject to the cruelties of men who look down on women as inferior simply because of their sex. The sexual exploitation of these females often lead to the women fathering children of their white masters. Black women were also prohibited from defending themselves against any type of abuse, including sexual, at the hands of white men. If a slave attempted to defend herself she was often subjected to further beatings from the master. The black female was forced into sexual relationships for the slave master’s pleasure and profit. By doing this it was the slave owner ways of helping his slave population grow.
While the majority of black women accounts are lost to history due to anti-literacy laws, we do have a good idea of what their lives were, through slave narratives and other records. The life of a female slave in pre-civil war America was characterized by sexual assault, physical and mental abuse along with harsh treatment both in the fields and inside the master’s house. Female slaves were treated as property with no regards to their
At the 1851 Women's Right Convention in Akron, Ohio Sojourner Truth, delivers a wonderful speech about women’s rights. Her speech is arguing the claim made by ministers that states, “: women were weak, men were intellectually superior to women, Jesus was a man, and our first mother sinned.” Sojourner Truth’s speech is to draw attention to the topic of women’s right. Implying that in this world women need to be helped when it comes to them being outside. For her, it is not even like the stereotype in which they have to be helped, because of her skin color. In her speech, Sojourner supports her claim about how women are treated differently except [especially for her because of her skin color] her by saying, Ain't I a woman.” This implies that she should be treated the same if other women are treated some sort. Which also circulates to the other idea in her speech, how women can do the exact same amount as men. If men can walk over mud the woman can do, they do not need help. If white women were helped then she should be helped as well. Connecting to her phrase “Ain't I a woman.” This idea attributes to both sides of her speech, which were equal rights, and how she should be treated the same as another woman. Allowing her voice to seem more intellectual, Sojourner adds all of the attributes of a woman (having kids, her arms). Which adds more support to her claim of why she is not treated the same as white women or even as a human. Who just happens to be women. Sojourner
The sad part is that people that thought the men were the most important workers, but without the women none of the duties would have been finished. They served and equal role in making the plantation work and weren’t given the credit they deserved. Without the women staying in the house and looking after the children or cooking the meals, none of the men would have food or somewhere to sleep when they were done with their work. One can see that every duty should’ve been seen as equal. The women could do the same duties as the men and vice versa either way the duties are all needed to make the system work.
First of all, women don’t have important rights in slavery society. Patriarchal system is operated under the absolute dominance of men, and women have responsibility to fully obey husbands. Women have to serve men and accept their inferiority to men. Husbands possess absolute control over wives and children just as they do over their slaves. White women share common characteristics of patriarchal system. They are not allowed to freely move and always have to ask their husbands’ permissions. White female gentries have so many responsibilities for the family. They were expected to take care of her children, support husbands unconditionally, do the household
As many women struggled to retain their values and traditions, there were existing male dominated conceptions of race and white dominated conceptions of gender. Kimberle Crenshaw describes the concept of intersectionality where race and gender interact in various ways to shape multiple dimensions experiences for different groups
For the reasons that I’m about to list, no exceptions have to be made considering I will refer to when I get more specific in each case. The first point directly contradicts the idea that women had more freedom pointing out that most women were restricted to where and who they met with (Norton, 79). This predicament was prevalent with white and black women alike as they both worked for plantations and farms in which this rule was enforced. Secondly, European women in America were found to have married at earlier ages than the women that stayed in Europe (Norton, 81). Some women in America were even being married as teenagers. This made Norton draw the conclusion that these women in their teenage years might not have been given as much power as older wives in the area which shows that women may not have gotten as many benefits as once thought. Upon further examination it is seen that despite 20 percent of the American population being black slaves, very little study has been done to show that it was a golden age for black women at the time (Norton, 83). Black women who were slaves were found to have been exploited sexually and economically by their owners, which was certainly not a happy alternative to not living in America (Norton, 83). Black women were also encouraged to get pregnant at a young age in order to increase the amount of slaves that the owner had control over. The
On the other spectrum it can be argued that she was talking to the woman since the speech was given the Women’s Rights Convention of 1851 in Ohio. Sojourner was speaking to women of her likeness. She was speaking to the woman who worked hard and didn’t meet ones typical expectation of what a woman is. She was
Not only were women victims, but also activists. There were many different groups of women who fought against the inequalities that they had to face and stood up for the protection of white women. One of the groups who did this was the Sojourners for Truth and Justice, this group was led by two African American women, Louise Thompson Patterson and Beulah Richardson. Their main goal was to bring all women together to fight against the abuse that the whites had caused. They joined together and shared stories of the sexual abuse they have been victims of and had talked about how they need to find ways to protect black women and stop being treated as if they weren’t human. Over 100 women had met up there and joined the meeting, “On September 29,
During the time of slavery, not only were African Americans were treated unfairly, but their women had it worse at times; African American women would be raped would be raped by their owners, or be trafficked around from man to man (Browne-Marshall). The white man was seen as evil, disgusting and cruel, so being a black woman carrying a white man’s child was basically
Women slaves endured far worse punishment and cruelty than men ever did. Lets begin with women’s duties. Their duties consisted of two parts. The first part was that of being a household servant. They did the cleaning, cooking, cared for the white children of their Mistress and Master, and other household duties. Secondly, slave women had to not only maintain the household, at times, they were also expected to work in the fields and slave like the men on the plantations. Things like picking cotton, cleaning outside, feeding animals, and hoeing the grounds for planting crops. Slave men were never made to perform women duties.