Roles Of African-American Women

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Differences of Women in The Authors’ Eyes In each of the stories the women, all of the women acted differently. Women had not as many rights as men did and so there lives were a little bit different. They had to live under the man’s ruling and listen to what they had to say. Also, where the people lived and their color had different rulings for women and how they lived. In the late 1800s, the most of the women stayed home and did chores to keep the home neat and the men happy. The women in the lower-class had to go out and work so both them and their husbands can bring home money so they could have a house and food. The women in the lower class had simple jobs, like working at a food store or being a maid at a small hotel they had back then. They did what they could to bring home money. …show more content…
They did different things all around America and what they had to do, they might have not like it. Also, the women that were of different color acted a whole lot different than the average American women. The African-American women were not like the average American women back then. They had been finally freed from slavery a decade or so before that and they were trying to adapt to trying to being able to do things that they weren’t allowed to do before, like go to church or live in their own home. They didn’t have to be told to do things for other people to keep those people happy. In many of the stories we had to read, many of them involved describing how the women were back then. In “Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl” by Harriet Ann Jacobs, it tells about a girl who learned and write from her mother’s mistress and after the mistress died, she was sent to one of the mistress’ relative who were mean to her. It also is an autobiography of Harriet, so it was telling how cruel her life was when she was young and growing up and how it changed after she grew