Summary Of Harriet Jacobs The Foot Of Pain

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“The Foot of Pain” is a memorial commemorating the women who were victims of slavery. During America’s age of slavery, many women were torn from their homes and taken across the sea to an unfamiliar world, forced into brutal labor. “The Foot of Pain” represents the feelings and struggles felt by these slave women. Its design was inspired by Harriet Jacobs’ moving autobiography Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl.
The memorial is a statue of a twenty feet tall foot that is chained to three large five feet tall weights. The foot stands on a ten feet high pedestal covered with one foot tall spikes. There are four main components to this memorial: the foot, the spikes, the chains and weights, and the pedestal. Each component represents a specific …show more content…

Individually, each weight represents a specific burden the slave women dealt with in society. One weight is colored dark red, depicting blood and violence. It symbolizes exploitation and harsh labor. Slaves were often pushed to their mental and physical limits because their slaveowners’ demands and need for wealth. They would often ignore the fact that slave mothers were exhausted from taking care of their own families and would force these women to take on field positions meant for strong, male laborers. Another weight is a clear, glass box that represents isolation from the world. Even though most these slaves were around people of similar complexions, they often had differing cultures and languages (Diouf). The last weight is colored pink, depicting human flesh and horrific sexual abuse. Many slave women were raped by sailors, overseers, and slave holders (Diouf). For Linda Brent, she suffered sexual assault from her master starting at a young age. She stated “he peopled my young mind with unclean images, such as only a vile monster could think of. I turned from him with disgust and hatred. But he was my master. I was compelled to live under the same roof with him—where I saw a man forty years my senior daily violating the most sacred commandments” (Jacobs 44). These slaves faced constant, harsh conditions. They were held back by these

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