Social Ramification In Celia As Slave By Mclaurin

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The book “Celia as Slave” by McLaurin emphasizes the life of an African American teenager young girl slave named Celia. This real story of Celia demonstrates the social, political and sexual ramifications during this horrible time in American history. Celia who was purchased at the age of fourteen by a farmed named Robert Newsom. This Machiavellian “man” If he can be called one, loses his wife leaving him with two young daughters. Newsom has apparently become in a sexual need where he becomes using innocent girl “Celia” as a sexual object. Newsom brought a small place to live for Celia located behind her farm where he visits Celia every night to rape her. Many years passed and Celia began a romance with another slave who obviously pushed Celia …show more content…

After killing him in self-defense Celia burn his body. Given this “crime” Celia was called to be judges were the legal process extended a lot and finally she was found guilty. By this McLaurin prove who the social ramification was in lack of values and real laws that protect whites and blacks equally. The author also proves who Africans Americans were used as objects. McLaurin also shows who the sexual ramification on this section from the book “was warmly congratulated by his friends on his first and successful effort before a promiscuous body” (McLaurin, pg14). This quote clearly states the sexual ramification. This quote shows how the childhood friends of Celia recanted her just for the horrible life that she was passing by. Besides how this can be possible, why our justice system was so horrible at that time. Why they give death penalty to a girl go being abused since she was only fourteen years old. Why does Celia judge so bad because when she needed no body where they 're to judge this horrible …show more content…

McLaurin uses Celia 's story to expose the strains that worried the fabric of antebellum southern society. Celia 's case shows how one master 's exploitation of power over a single slave forced whites to make moral decisions about the nature of slavery. McLaurin emphases hard on the role of gender, exploring the degree, to which female slaves were sexually demoralized, the circumstances that often banned white women from ending such abuse, and the powerlessness of male slaves to support slave women. Setting the case in the context of the 1850s slavery debates, he also probes the manner in which the legal system was used to justify slavery. By allowing slaves certain statutory rights (which were usually reduced empty by the customary prerogatives of masters), southerners could argue that they observed moral restraint in the operations of their peculiar

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