Sojourner Truth Theory

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Sojourner Truth, or Isabella Baumfree, was an African American born into slavery in 1797, a period where the United States was still struggling to find a sense of direction. At this point in time, the southern region of the country, specifically Virginia, was continuing to tighten up laws making life more difficult for slaves. Despite spending her childhood on an estate in New York, Truth still experienced the hardships of being sold and mistreated and eventually ran away after her master failed to keep a promise to free her in 1827. She went on to become involved in the anti-slavery movement and in the 1850s also advocated for women’s rights. Most famously, Sojourner Truth delivered a speech entitled, “Ain’t I A Woman”, in which she outlines the hypocrisy of white men mistreating women, and demanded equal human rights for both, all …show more content…

The white man would do all of the hard physical labor and women were not allowed to do anything other than what they were expected to do. These boundaries were tested by Sojourner Truth who talks about her experiences as a woman, outlining the rampant amount of mistreatment she went through. Truth was conveying that women were capable of doing just as much work as a man, and she challenged what men said they would do for women when she pointed out the hypocrisy in their actions. She talks about how she was never helped into carriages, or lifted over ditches and this is all to prove that she is capable of doing those things herself, and also that women could survive without a strong man leading the way. These actions by Truth demonstrates the hypocrisy of white men who constantly pushed the idea that women needed a man to survive and simultaneously empowered her women audience members to realize that they were capable of doing just as much work as men and truly being an impactful member of

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