#Harriet jacobs
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key-cat · 8 months ago
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The beautiful spring came, and when nature resumes her loveliness, the human soul is apt to revive also.
美しい春が訪れて自然が愛らしさを取り戻すとき、人間の魂もまた蘇る傾向にある。
Harriet Jacobs ハリエット・アン・ジェイコブズ
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asapforautumnbooks · 18 days ago
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Harriet Jacobs: Incidents in the life of a slave girl, Ch.XLI
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misespinas · 9 months ago
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"What does he know of the half-starved wreaths toiling from dawn till dark on the plantations? of mothers shrieking for their children, torn from their arms by slave traders? of young girls dragged down into moral filth? of pools of blood around the whipping post? of hounds trained to tear human flesh? of men screwed into cotton gins to die?"
Harriet Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
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yourbleedingh3art · 1 month ago
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"Friend! It is a common word, often lightly used. Like other good and beautiful things, it may be tarnished by careless handling; but when I speak of [You] as my friend, the word is sacred."
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apenitentialprayer · 1 year ago
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Truly, the colored race are the most cheerful and forgiving people on the face of the earth. That their masters sleep in safety is owing to their super-abundance of heart[.]
Harriet Jacobs (Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Chapter XVI)
The oligarchic character of the modern English commonwealth does not rest, like many oligarchies, on the cruelty of the rich to the poor. It does not even rest on the kindness of the rich to the poor. It rests on the perennial and unfailing kindness of the poor to the rich.
G.K. Chesterton (Heretics, pages 106-107)
Let the praise of God be on their lips and a two-edged sword in their hand, to deal out vengeance to the nations and punishment on all the peoples; to bind their kings in chains and their nobles in fetters of iron; to carry out the sentence preordained; this honor is for all His faithful.
Psalm 149:6-9
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pennstateuniversitypress · 5 months ago
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A Black Philadelphia Reader: An exerpt
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The common date given for the settlement of Philadelphia is 1682, when William Penn established a Quaker colony, providing it with a name that means “one who loves his brother.” Penn intended an idyllic “greene country towne,” one that was well ordered, with large open spaces within its twelve hundred acres. It “was the first major American town to be planned.” Penn envisioned his “towne” as a place of freedom, particularly in terms of religion. As with a certain amount of history, much of this is myth. The land, of course, had been settled by the Lenape Indians long before the Europeans arrived. Additionally, Penn’s “greene country towne” soon became a highly congested city, plagued by disease, crime, and fires. Its vaunted freedom was largely limited to White Protestants, and its “brotherly love” certainly did not extend to most immigrants, to non-Christians, or, in particular, to its Black residents.
Blacks have been at the center of Philadelphia’s history since before it was even known by that name. More than two thousand Blacks lived in the area once called New Sweden between 1638 and 1655. The fledgling colony encompassed parts of western Delaware and parts of Pennsylvania that now include Philadelphia. One of the most famous of these settlers was Antoni Swart (Black Anthony), a West Indian who arrived in the colony in 1639 aboard a Swedish vessel. Though initially enslaved, records indicate he eventually became free and was employed by Governor Johan Printz.
The history of Black Philadelphians has been one fraught with both great promise and shattered dreams from its beginnings until today. Philadelphia was, as historian Gary Nash observes, “created in an atmosphere of growing Negrophobia”; still, despite ongoing racial prejudice, “it continues to this day to be one of the vital urban locations of black Americans.” It is this paradoxical condition that is the most characteristic dynamic of the city’s relationship with its Black citizens. One facet of this relationship has been constant: whether African Americans have thrived here or suffered egregious oppression, they have never remained silent, never letting anyone else define their situation for them. They have always voiced their own opinions about their condition in their city through fiction, poetry, plays, essays, diaries, letters, or memoirs. The city has been blessed with a number of significant authors, ranging, among others, from Richard Allen to W. E. B. Du Bois to Jessie Fauset to Sonia Sanchez to John Edgar Wideman to Lorene Cary. In addition, there have been numerous lesser known but also forceful figures as well, including the enslaved people Alice and Cato, who were only known by those names. Whether they were native sons and daughters or spent significant time in the city or were there only long enough to experience the city in an impactful moment, Philadelphia has touched them all deeply. This anthology is a documentation of and a tribute to their collective voice. The focus here is not just on writers with a Philadelphia connection but on the authors’ views on the city itself. The hope is to provide a wide variety of Black perspectives on the city.
There is something special about what leading African American intellectual W. E. B. Du Bois once labeled “the Philadelphia Negro.” One reason for this uniqueness is the city’s relationship to its Black inhabitants, in part caused by their intertwined, virtually symbiotic, history. No other major Northern city in the country has had such a long connection with African Americans, one forged in the seventeenth century, and Blacks have never stopped coming. They first settled largely in what are now called the Old City and Center City, where some Blacks still live. They have since scattered throughout the city, sometimes by choice but often by necessity and force, today mostly residing in Northern and Western Philadelphia. Migration patterns have changed over the years, as in other cities, but the Black population in the city has rarely declined and has often increased in number. Philadelphia was, as of 2020, the sixth-largest metropolis in the nation, and Blacks make up more than 40 percent of the population there, more than the percentage of any of the other top ten cities in the country.
Philadelphia has a vibrant and culturally rich history, offering enormous promise to its inhabitants since its beginnings. It was founded with the premise of religious freedom and steeped in the radical independence movement that created this country. The city was settled by Quakers, perhaps the religious group that, in popular opinion if not always in fact, has most vociferously been associated with opposition to slavery. The “peculiar institution” was, in fact, almost nonexistent there by the early years of the nineteenth century. Philadelphia was the center of the Underground Railroad, with such legendary conductors as William Still. As the closest major city situated above the Mason-Dixon line, symbolically separating the North from the South, many fugitives from enslavement passed through Philadelphia. Some moved on, but a large number stayed, as the city seemed like the promised land for many African Americans. This is the powerful narrative of the city’s history that still holds true for numerous people today when they think of Philadelphia.
There is also something unique about the Black experience in this city. Blacks have had a nominal freedom throughout most of their existence in Philadelphia, yet when we look under the surface, Philadelphia’s treatment of African Americans has hardly been benign. The city has held out promises, but unfortunately many of these promises were not kept. Philadelphia may be situated in the North, but as Sonia Sanchez so eloquently writes in her poem “elegy (For MOVE and Philadelphia),” in many ways “philadelphia / [is] a disguised southern city.” There were Quakers, many of whom were abolitionists and worked for the Underground Railroad, but there were many others of the faith who were slaveholders, including the colony’s founder, William Penn. And even if the city was replete with abolitionists, it did not ensure that they viewed African Americans as equals. Blacks were, in fact, disfranchised from the vote in 1838, never to regain it until the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment in 1870. Although the city was the center of the antislavery movement, not all of its White residents opposed slavery, and even if they did, the Fugitive Slave Acts of 1793 and 1850 hampered efforts to keep Blacks out of bondage. Before and after the Civil War, as demonstrated throughout this text, the city experienced a series of violent racial conflicts and has continue to practice an ugly pattern of segregation in housing, transportation, education, and employment, severely limiting the prospects of improvement for its Black citizens. There is a long history of racial injustice practiced by Philadelphia’s police as well as Black residents being ignored, at best, by the city government.
A Black Philadelphia Reader: African American Writings About the City of Brotherly Love is available for pre-order from Penn State University Press. Learn more and order the book here: https://www.psupress.org/books/titles/978-0-271-09731-2.html. Take 30% off with discount code NR24.
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notchainedtotrauma · 1 year ago
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In the crawlspace above the main floor of her grandmother's house, where she confined herself for more than seven years to escape mastery's sexual predation (in this first instance a Southern man with Southern principles) Harriet Jacobs (and/or Linda Brents, her shadowed, shadowing double and counteraffective effect) is on the way to cinema, precisely at the place where fantasy and document, music and moaning, movement and picturing converge. Hers is an amazing medley of shifts, a choreography in confinement, internal to a frame it instantiates and shatters.
from Black and Blur by Fred Moten
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escapeintothepages · 1 year ago
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“The brightest skies are always foreshadowed by dark clouds.”
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Harriet Jacobs
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sheepintheastralsea · 2 years ago
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every american high school should have Harriet Jacobs’ writings on their curriculum.
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thebooklook · 2 years ago
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Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs
It's rare to find such an amazingly eloquent biography of such a dramatic life. The author faced a new, more severe struggle just as the previous one was overcome, again and again, for most of their life. Her strength and dedication are amazing, and I hope that once she gained her freedom she finally found the peaceful homestead she had been fighting for. I tend not to enjoy biographies but this one reads like a soap opera. I absolutely loved it and tore though it quickly on vacation. I'd highly recommend it to anyone looking for a good biography or some insight into the lives of enslaved women in America.
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yourbleedingh3art · 1 month ago
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"She clasped a gold chain round my baby’s neck. I thanked her for this kindness; but I did not like the emblem. I wanted no chain to be fastened on my daughter, not even if its links were of gold."
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apenitentialprayer · 1 year ago
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My mistress had taught me the precepts of God's Word: "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." [Matt 22:39b] "Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do ye even so unto them." [Matt 7:12a] But I was her slave, and I supposed she did not recognize me as her neighbor.
Harriet Jacobs (from Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Chapter I)
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sinceileftyoublog · 1 year ago
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Corinne Bailey Rae Album Review: Black Rainbows
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(Thirty Tigers)
BY JORDAN MAINZER
There's very little in the back catalog of English R&B singer-songwriter Corinne Bailey Rae that would prepare you for Black Rainbows. While over her previous three albums, Bailey Rae increasingly, but gradually experimented, veering ever so slightly from the gentle neo soul she became known for, her fourth and best album is an urgent aesthetic about-face. Combining the punk influences from her teenage years with a newfound exploration of Afrofuturist jazz and electronica, Black Rainbows is inspired by a Theaster Gates exhibit Bailey Rae saw at the Stony Island Arts Bank. There, she saw images of a Black history that wasn't focused solely on oppression and trauma, nor just excellence and joy, but a journey of overcoming. "We long to arc our arm through history / To unpick every thread," she sings on album opener "A Spell, A Prayer", a song that starts with silence but builds up with slinky bass, pulsating drums, feedback squalls, shimmers, and layered vocal harmonies, a statement of purpose from a sonic collective.
Black Rainbows is effective because of its mix of inspirations, some direct and others broad, and how they yield sonic variety. The album's lead singles are prime examples of the former. The cheerleader chanting pop punk of "New York Transit Queen" is a tribute to Audrey Smaltz, the first Black Miss New York Transit, whose vibrant aura is represented by explosive guitars and drum fills. In contrast is stark piano ballad "Peach Velvet Sky", where Bailey Rae's vocal performance inhabits the story of Harriet Jacobs as per her autobiography Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Among all the songs on the album, it sounds closest to something Bailey Rae would have sung two decades ago. (Bailey Rae did read Jacobs' book as a child.) But her reconnection with the story at the Stony Island Arts Bank is exemplary of Bailey Rae's overall deeper dive into Black stories.
Elsewhere on Black Rainbows, Bailey Rae generally but critically examines the past and imagines a better future. The pummeling post-punk of "Erasure" laments the effacement of Black contributions to cultural history, her voice effectively breaking out from behind obscuring noise. On the beatific "Earthlings", she dares to ask, "Could we find work and time to dance?" and "Can't we take the lessons that we've learned / And make a new Utopia?", finding radical beauty in electric, echoing guitar strums and birdsong. The progressive "He Will Follow You With His Eyes" sees psychedelic bossanova give way to skittering electronica as Bailey Rae proclaims love for an authentic, beautiful self. "I'll be smouldering in my plum red lipstick / My black hair kinking / My black skin gleaming," she repeats over a beat, mantra-like.
Ultimately, Black Rainbows is an album about love, for oneself and one's community, for Black art and stories, for romantic partners and friends. Bailey Rae experiments with divergent vocal deliveries and musical genres to mirror the complexity and vastness of her artistic world, subdued coos to passionate shouts, rap, thumping techno, and acid house to soulful dance and jazz. She makes a masterwork out of the act of exploration, inward and outward.
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notchainedtotrauma · 1 year ago
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But this is an old-new sonority's old-new complaint and Miles, like Jacobs, keeps going past such emancipation by way of a deeper inhabitation of the song that makes it seem as if he were young again, as if embarking for the first time on the terrible journey toward some new knowledge of (the) reality (principle), the new knowledge of homelessness and constant escape.
from Black and Blur by Fred Moten
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escapeintothepages · 2 years ago
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“Reader, did you ever hate? I hope not. I never did but once; and I trust I never shall again. Somebody has called it "the atmosphere of hell"; and I believe it is so.”
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Harriet Jacobs
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boricuacherry-blog · 1 year ago
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