Courage and Consequence — A Hidden Attic, a Public Book, and a System Indicted
Edenton, 1825. An eleven-year-old girl handed to a doctor by codicil. By fifteen, his demands. By twenty, two children he could sell. By twenty-two, a crawlspace nine feet by seven feet by three feet at the peak, where she would live for seven years to keep him from her son and daughter. She did not stop there. Nineteen years after she got out, she put the story into public print under a thin pseudonym in a country where the Fugitive Slave Act still ran. Frederick Douglass wrote a slave narrative the nation learned to assign in schools. Harriet Jacobs wrote a slave narrative the nation forgot until 1973, and did not fully credit to her until 1987. She named the sexual coercion, the maternal terror, and the Northern complicity that earlier slave narratives had stepped around. Harriet Jacobs needs to be remembered.
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