The Enslaved Black Woman

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African American women are perhaps the most vital and dynamic piece of American history. Both the free and enslaved were the mothers of generations of excellence who left a legacy of perseverance and power despite being objectified, degraded, and exploited for centuries. The Black woman has been discriminated against, her image destroyed yet she stands resilient. The right to choose when, where, and whom to share her body with meant to have control of her most valuable asset. It was the only way the whites say she was of worth, as a womb, a tool for profit. Ownership of her own body built a fortress of protection against not only physical but mental abuse that could potentially occur. She had many faces who all took different routes to protect …show more content…

The societal view of the black women was one of allure. She was the jezebel, forcing white men to fall into her trap of sexual promiscuity, and knowing this, slave mothers feared for the future of their daughters as their mothers had feared for them. The enslaved Black woman faced a society in which “some were convinced that she, a slave woman, was lewd and lascivious, that they invited sexual overtures from white men, and that any resistance they displayed was mere feigning” . There was justification found in the actions of white males as she could not truly be raped by law. She was simply someone else’s property, with no rights to herself. At most, someone could trespass. Only white women could be victims of rape in the eyes of the law; only men who raped them were rapists. This was the word for someone who took what was sacred to her: her body, her temple. This was the life of Celia, of Margaret Garner, of Harriet Jacobs, of Ona Judge. This was the bitter reality of the enslaved black …show more content…

She was young and attractive. It would be nearly impossible to avoid advances, a reality of female enslavement that stoked the fears of young girls and women alike. Rape and forced breeding torturously enlarged the institution of slavery, reminding every enslaved woman that she was never safe from sexual attack” . Ona, like many” slave women [was] extremely vulnerable because of the nature of their [master and slave] relationship. Enslaved women had no real choices about whether they would or would not engage in sex with their owners” . Ona was in the state which many slave women find themselves. Caught between taxing housework and the sexual advances of those who had power over her. She resisted in order to protect a body that was not hers. However, she sought to find a way to make it her own. She acted by effortlessly taking to the streets of Washington, D.C. and running towards freedom which she found on a steamboat to New Hampshire, never to

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