dfsa

1079 Words3 Pages

Linda, Dana and Moria through out each of their novels, face a hard life, wanting to receive a better life for themselves. All the women face difficult challenges in the patriarchy society. The novels struggle to fight the different institutional forces that are holding each of the women back in life. The main characters are not able to overcome the institutional forces that keep them enslaved. Harriot Jacobs examines the role of the slave community and communal bonds in Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Linda Brent is the slave of Dr. Flint. Linda lives on Dr. Flint’s plantation. Dr. Flint does not like the fact that Linda has power and knowledge over him. Linda outsmarts Dr. Flint by sending post cards from New York. Dr. Flint travels to New York to find Linda to bring her back home to his plantation, but Linda did not travel to New York. Mrs. Flint hates how Dr. Flint couples with female slaves. In response, Mrs. Flint takes this out on the slaves. Throughout the novel, Mrs. Flint threatens Linda, along with denying her bastard children. Mrs. Flint does not approve of how Dr. Flint tells others that the children are his daughters. In the novel, particular people and laws get in the way of the slaves uniting together. The institutional forces are getting in the way of the slave solidarity. In Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, the slave law states that the children follow the condition of the mother. This law gets in the way of the slaves uniting together. Linda has two children and wants them to be free, but she knows her children will not be free because she herself is a slave. The children’s father is a free African-American man, but the children become slaves since Linda is a slave. Dr. Flint gets in the way of... ... middle of paper ... ...up in men’s clothing, trying to escape Rufus. Rufus and his father would always search for Dana, finding her in a field. Once Rufus and his father has captured Dana, they would beat Dana and bring her back to the plantation. Moria in The Handmaid’s Tale tries to escape, but she cannot. Moria has tried many times to escape, one time Moria did escaped. Moria had to return back to Gilead, just like Dana and Linda had to return back to the plantation. Moria does not find contentment in her life she falls into prostitution. Linda, Dana and Mora are not successful at resisting. They do not have a home; they wander and are more or less stuck between enslavement and a sense of self for the whole book. Linda, Dana and Moria do not find contentment with their lives. Linda’s grandmother is the only character to find contentment. She is no longer a slave, and lives by oneself.

Open Document