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Incidents In The Life Of A Slave Girl

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When in a piece of literature or a movie, the main conflict is a character going against society. This describes the conflict of person versus society. The conflict of person versus society for Linda in the book, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. This conflict is talked about in an article by Marilyn C. Wesley by stating, “Given the nature of this conflict-social codes of external ownership set against the protagonist’s refusal of internal occupation” (Westley 62). Slavery also played a stupendous role as a conflict in the book. It was a difficult time for the African Americans. Slavery was unfair, and it made the whites feel superior to blacks. In The Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, it tells Linda’s side of the story of the horror …show more content…

Her slave holder says, “You are my slave, and shall always be my slave. I will never sell you, that you may depend on” (Jacobs 77). For all of this book, it is about whites vs. blacks. Linda is mistreated by her slave owner, and her desire for freedom grows appropriately strong. The book tells this fact by writing for Linda to say, “I was meditating upon some means of escape for myself and my children. My friends had made every effort that ingenuity could devise to effect our purchase purchase, but all their plans had proved abortive” (Jacobs 113). She eventually had to face her fear of running away from her master’s home. Before she could complete this task, she had to hide for several years. Linda hid for seven years in her home town close to the her master’s house before she could finally get freedom. Linda’s plan for her and her children to gain freedom was for her to run away, and after this she thought Dr. Flint would sell her children to their free, African American father also known as Linda’s lover. Casey Pratt talks about this in his article by stating, “The subdy suggestive language here resists metaphorical symmetry; freely choosing one’s lover is not freedom, it is only akin to freedom. Even when Linda Brent’s narrative is ostensibly about interpersonal sympathy, the theme of freedom holds the foundational position” (Pratt 70). Linda had such determination for obtaining freedom. An article talks about this determination by stating, “Within the system of slavery, there exists no place of self-definition or control for the female slave; nevertheless, Linda, like the postmodern subjects de Certeau endorses, has created and occupied a zone of personal determination,

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