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19th-Century American Literature Videos 35 videos

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ELA 11 5.1: Harriet Jacobs 136 Views


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Description:

Harriet Jacobs' narrative gave Americans an unprecedented account of what it meant to be a fugitive of slavery. Check out this video for more about her story.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

Slavery was abolished in the United States in 1865 if you [Arms break free of chains]

00:09

don't have your calculator app on hand while that was more than 150 years ago

00:13

and yet the consequences of slavery are still with us which is why today we're

00:18

going to learn about Harriet Jacobs. Well Jacobs was the first woman in the United [Picture of Harriet Jacobs]

00:23

States to write a fugitive slave narrative although it took a pretty long [Harriet writing with a quill]

00:27

time for it to gain popularity, and by a pretty long time we don't mean a year or

00:31

two we mean all about a century give or take a year. By the time her [Harriet in a coffin holding up her book]

00:36

autobiography "Incidents in the life of a slave girl" was published in 1860

00:40

the US was staring down the maw of Civil War. Nobody had time to appreciate [The U.S. looking down the mouth of a lion]

00:45

Harriet's harrowing tale of life as a slave and then as a fugitive on the

00:50

run. Today we're taking the time. Harriet was born in North Carolina in 1813 and

00:56

the first 12 years of her life were pretty happy. Her mistress was nice to her [Harriet dancing with her arms in the air]

01:00

as nice as a mistress can be, her slave owners and stuff... And taught Harriet

01:05

to read and spell, but then Harriet's mistress died and Harriet was willed to [Harriet's mistress falls to the floor]

01:10

a little girl which basically meant that Harriet became the property of the

01:14

little girl's dad Dr. Norcom and Dr. Norcom was a bad bad dude. Seriously if he [Dr. Norcom becomes the devil]

01:21

had the opportunity to buy a creepy van and hand out candy from it he

01:24

probably would have. Norcom wanted to have sex with teenaged Harriet and Harriet

01:28

definitely wanted nothing to do with the nasty old letch. But she was a slave which [Harriet hits Norcom with a broom and runs away]

01:33

meant she ultimately had no choice in the matter, and yet she figured a way out

01:36

of her predicament. Harriet had sex with someone else a white attorney. Her

01:42

plan was to make Norcom so angry that she slept with someone else that he'd [Norcom gets angry and his ears steam]

01:46

sell her off or have a stroke and die whichever came first. In the end Harriet

01:51

had two children with her lawyer lover, she pretended to escape so she'd be out

01:54

of Norcom clutches and he'd have no excuse not to sell her kids to their [Harriet goes up some stairs]

01:59

father. So for seven years she lived in a cramped crawlspace, there were bugs they

02:04

were rodents, there were bugs on rodents, but she could look down on her kids

02:09

every day and know they were safe. Well ultimately Harriet [Harriet looks down and her children are smiling]

02:13

boyfriend failed to free his kids from slavery and he actually sent his own

02:16

daughter Louisa to work as a servant in Brooklyn. We wouldn't want that guy's [Tredwell chucks his daughter on a boat]

02:21

our attorney, just saying... Harriet was having none of that, she escaped for real this

02:26

time reclaimed her kids and spent the next 10 years living on the lam with [Harriet and her kids running from Norcom]

02:29

Norcom in hot pursuit. Sounds like a horror movie to us but it was just normal life

02:33

to her. Harriet ended up living and working in the company of abolitionists.

02:37

One of them, Amy Post, urged Harriet to tell her story and Harriet did. Incidents [Harriet at an abolitionist assembly]

02:43

in the life of a slave girl is notable because it focuses on something that

02:46

Victorian society did not want to think about, yes,sex, specifically harriet [Victorian man screams when reading Harriet's book]

02:52

detailed how slaves like her suffered sexually at the hands of their masters.

02:56

And while the white ladies of the time might faint in horror at the fact that Harriet [Woman reading Harriet's book faints]

03:00

had chosen to get busy with the white lawyer man in order to escape Norcom

03:05

well Harriet was confident the greater sin was that Norcom and men like him were

03:09

sexual tyrant to their slaves. During and after the Civil War Harriet and her [Norcom as the devil wearing a crown that says sexual tyrant]

03:14

daughter Louisa worked to bring relief to recently freed slaves in Washington DC

03:18

and in the south. Ultimately the two women were driven north by racial

03:22

violence and Harriet settled in Massachusetts where she opened a [Harriet running away from men with torches]

03:25

boardinghouse. She died in Washington DC in 1897. Harriet wrote in her

03:31

autobiography that she was never whipped, she was never mutilated, she never [Pictures of physical abuse slaves suffered]

03:35

suffered the abuses that many slaves did and yet she lived in constant fear that

03:40

her master would force her to grant control of her own body to him. [Harriet shakes at the thought of Norcom]

03:45

And of course she wasn't an isolated case so many other black women just like her had

03:49

to live with the same threat day in and day out. Well in the end Harriet Jacobs [Harriet on a boat]

03:53

escaped and told her story, a story she shared with so many others and still [Harriet holding up her book]

03:57

should be shared today. Read this book people, read it it will make you a better person. [People reading Harriet's book at a library]

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