How Does Williams Present Life In Jamaica After Slavery

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James Williams wrote a narrative of events that highlighted life in Jamaica post slavery. A new system was initiated known as apprenticeship, a period of time in which ex-slaves were obliged to work for their former masters. Present were a number of conditions as part of the apprenticeship program, such as workers obligated to work without compensation for their masters for a period of four years or more . In Williams’s narrative, the tales of punishment and ill treatment under this system was more severe than that of slavery. Freed slaves and workers were subject and forced to work under extraneous conditions, no different than when enslaved. This system was established by the British as a transition from slavery to free labor, however as …show more content…

Ann’s parish in Jamaica. He is reflecting upon his former life as a slave, when he was not so mistreated. Williams writes “when I was a slave, I never flogged- I sometimes was switched, but not badly, but since the new law begin, I have been flogged seven times, and put in the house of correction four times” . The dismal treatment faced by the apprentices was a prevalent through the narrative. A surmount of evidence was provided in accordance with the abuse and terror of the apprentice …show more content…

Drivers on the plantation would constantly try to get at the young women that were put into the workhouse. These young women would receive unwanted attention from the drivers, even those who were married. In the morning the driver would open the door and call for the one that he desired to come to his room, while some do what the drivers wanted others refused. Women, while dancing on the treadmill had to tie their dress or skirt up to prevent it from being caught in the treadmill, not only exposing their bodies but also making them vulnerable. Likewise, there are times when women would be beaten so badly that their clothes would be rendered exposing their backs and other intimate areas of their bodies allowing those in the workhouse to see their

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