Truth
Sojourner Truth used to sell this carte de visite (CDV) in 1864 and beyond (MET Museum)

TEXT:  Truth, “I Am a Woman’s Rights” (1851)

  • Short speech delivered by Truth at a Woman’s Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio and transcribed by Marius Robinson for the abolitionist newspaper, Anti-Slavery Bugle
  • A different version of this speech appeared in 1863 with a refrain that now has become famous:  “Arn’t [or Ain’t] I A Woman?”

CONTEXT:  Role(s) of Antebellum Women

  • Women’s roles changed during the Second Great Awakening, not only because of new revival opportunities in mainstream Protestant denominations but also because of the emergence of new religious sects and utopian communities
  • The Market Revolution also altered women’s roles in society, encouraging a new Cult of Domesticity (sometimes also called True Womanhood) for middle and upper class women
  • 1848 also marked a turning point in political organizing for women with the Seneca Falls Convention (against coverture) and Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s powerful Declaration of Sentiments

SUBTEXT:  Portraying Sojourner Truth

Actress Kerry Washington performs “Ain’t I A Woman?” version


METHODS CENTER —Wikipedia