Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl: Written by Herself is one of the central first-person slave narratives of nineteenth-century American literature, written by Harriet Jacobs under the pseudonym Linda Brent. First published in 1861, the book recounts Jacobs's life under slavery in North Carolina, her resistance to sexual exploitation, her struggle to protect her children, her years in concealment, and her eventual escape to freedom. It remains one of the most important narratives of slavery written by a woman.
Jacobs's account is both personal testimony and historical document. Unlike many better-known slave narratives centred on public escape, literacy, and political self-making, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl gives sustained attention to motherhood, sexual coercion, domestic vulnerability, family separation, and the particular dangers faced by enslaved women. Its force lies in the plainness of its witness: slavery is shown not as an abstraction but as an intimate system of control over bodies, children, homes, labour, and memory.
Edited by Lydia Maria Child and published on the eve of the American Civil War, the book belongs to African American autobiography, abolitionist literature, women's history, and the documentary record of American slavery. For readers, teachers, students, and libraries, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl remains essential to understanding slavery in the United States, the literature of emancipation, and the development of Black women's writing. The Smithsonian identifies the author as Harriet Ann Jacobs and dates the work to 1861; the original book appeared under the name Linda Brent.
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