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Paperback
Published: 13th April 2021
Paperback
Published: 1st May 2019
Paperback
Published: 5th January 2010
Paperback
Published: 14th February 2022
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
By (Author) Harriet Jacobs
Random House USA Inc
Modern Library Inc
13th April 2021
27th January 2021
United States
General
Non Fiction
B
Paperback
320
Width 132mm, Height 203mm
The most famous autobiography written by a nineteenth-century African American woman, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl is a triumph of American literature and an unflinching portrayal of the evils of slavery. The unflinching nineteenth-century autobiography that broke the silence on the psychosexual exploitation of Black women-with an introduction by Tiya Miles, author of All That She Carried and National Book Award finalist " A crowning achievement . . . Jacobs remodeled the forms of the black slave narrative and the white female sentimental novel to create a new literary form-a narrative at once black and female." -Henry Louis Gates, Jr., The New York Times In clear and unshrinking prose, Harriet Jacobs-writing under the pseudonym Linda Brent-relates the story of her girlhood and adolescence as a slave in North Carolina and her eventual escape- a bildungsroman set in the complex terrain of a chauvinist, white supremacist society. Resolutely addressing women readers, rather than men, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl seeks to make white women understand how the threat of sexual violence shapes the lives of enslaved Black women and children. Equalparts brave and searing, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl is a triumph of American literature. The Modern Library Torchbearers series features women who wrote on their own terms, with boldness, creativity, and a spirit of resistance. AMERICAN INDIAN STORIES . THE AWAKENING . THE CUSTOM OF THE COUNTRY . THE HEADS OF CERBERUS . LADY AUDLEY'S SECRET . LOVE, ANGER, MADNESS . PASSING . THE RETURN OF THE SOLDIER . THERE IS CONFUSION . THE TRANSFORMATION OF PHILIP JETTAN . VILLETTE
Harriet Jacobs (1813-1897) was born into slavery in North Carolina. She became a mother at sixteen, a fugitive slave at twenty-two, and, in January 1861 at the age of forty-eight, the author of Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. During the Civil War, Jacobs and her daughter, Louisa, returned to the South to aid African American refugees. Following the Civil War, they built an orphanage and home for African American children and elders in Savannah, Georgia.