ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
ELA 11 5.1: Harriet Jacobs 136 Views
Share It!
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.
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]
Full Transcript
- 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]
Up Next
“Happy Hunger Games!” Or not. Katniss’s Hunger Games experiences left a not-so-happy effect on her. This video will prompt you to ponder if...
Related Videos
Who's really the crazy one in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?
¿Por que es el 'Gran' Gatsby tan gran? ¿Porque de su nombre peculiar? ¿Porque de el misterio que le rodea? Se ha discutido esta pregunta por muc...
Would would the world be like without books? Ray Bradbury tackles that question—and many more— in Fahrenheit 451. Go ahead; read it on your Kin...