Activitat

Who was Sojourner Truth? II

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Tema: La lluita pels drets de les dones.

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Competència en Comunicació Lingüística

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Espanya > Anglés > 4t ESO > Comunicació

Espanya > Anglés > 4t ESO > Interculturalitat

Enunciat


ACTIVITY 1 
<https://list-english.ru/audio/BritishCouncil/audio/themes/WomensRights.pdf> (30/03/2022)


- Read the article Sojourner Truth, by Linda Baxter.

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Glossary 
abolish (v): to end (an activity, custom, etc.) officially 
abolition (n): act or state of ending (an activity, custom, etc.) officially 
campaigner (n): a person who takes part in organized activities which are intended to change something in society. 
cause (n): a socially valuable principle which is strongly supported by some people 
coloured (adj): If someone is described as coloured, they belong to a dark-skinned race. This word is considered offensive by many people.  
compelling (adj): forceful and able to persuade 
discrimination (n): act of treating a person or particular group of people differently, esp. in a worse way from the way in which you treat other people, because of their skin colour, religion, sex, etc. 
dislocate (v): to force (a bone) suddenly out of its correct position 
hostile (adj): showing strong dislike; unfriendly 
movement (n): those people whose social and political aims are to change something. 
odd jobs (n): a variety of jobs, esp. in the house or garden. 
preacher (n): a person, usually a priest, who gives a religious speech. 
predominant (adj): being the most noticeable, important or largest in number 
segregate (v): to cause to become separate or to keep apart, often for social reasons and esp. because of race or sex.
slavery (n): the activity of someone legally owning another person, who works as a servant for that person, and who has no personal freedom.  
  
 
The name Sojourner may be familiar to you. It was the name of the wheeled robot that was sent on the expedition to Mars in 1997 to explore the surface of the planet. The name was chosen after a world-wide competition, in which students were asked to choose a heroine, and write an essay explaining why her name should be given to the Mars Pathfinder. And Sojourner, which means a temporary resident or a traveller, was the winner. 
 
But who was Sojourner Truth? 
She was an African-American anti-slavery campaigner and a champion of women’s rights. She lived during the time of the American Civil war, a time when African-Americans were seen as inferior to white people, and slavery still existed. At the same time, women were seen as inferior to men. They did not have the vote, and a ‘real’ woman was supposed to stay at home, be protected by her husband, and not have an opinion on issues of the day. As a black woman, Sojourner Truth experienced both types of discrimination, and she was one of the first people to make the connection between the rights of slaves and black people and the rights of women. And she was the first African-American woman to make public speeches about it. 
 
A slave 
Sojourner was born was born into slavery in 1797. Her parents named her Isabella. She was one of ten or twelve children but they were all sold as slaves except for Isabella and her older brother Peter. When she was nine, her owner died and his property, including Isabella, was sold. She had to leave her family and go to a new owner. When she was 14, she was forced to marry another slave called Thomas. They had children who were also sold into slavery. In 1826, she ran away to New York, just a year before slavery was abolished in New York State. After gaining her freedom, Isabella worked as a domestic servant, which was one of the only jobs that freed black women could do. She was always deeply religious and attended church regularly. An important part of her religious belief was a strong conviction that God had created all human beings as equals. 
 

A preacher 
In 1843, Isabella had a religious experience. She believed that God told her to change her name to Sojourner Truth, and become a travelling preacher. So that’s exactly what she did. For a year she travelled around America, singing and preaching at prayer meetings. She supported herself with odd jobs, and slept wherever she could, often in the open air. After a year of preaching, Sojourner joined the Northampton Association. This was a predominantly white co-operative community, where property and resources were shared, and the members tried to find new and better ways of living together. The Northampton Association believed in liberal concepts such as the abolition of slavery, women’s rights, freedom of expression, and socialism. Sojourner’s eyes were opened and she began speaking publicly about the abolition of slavery and the rights of women, to mainly white and often very hostile audiences. 
 
A speaker 
Sojourner Truth was an impressive speaker and she soon became well known for her common sense, courage and quick sense of humour. Her experience of preaching was useful to her, and she was able to talk about her first-hand experiences of slavery. Her physical presence was compelling too- she was over six feet tall with a strong deep voice. She was often accused of being a man dressed up as a woman. So, to prove that this was not the case, she once lifted her blouse and showed her breasts to the audience at a public meeting. 
 
A writer 
Sojourner couldn’t read or write. But she dictated her memoirs to a woman friend, and they were published in 1850 as The Narrative of Sojourner Truth: A Northern Slave. This was one of the first accounts ever published of the life of a female slave, and the book was a success. Sojourner was able to buy her own house and she became even more popular as a speaker for the abolitionist cause, travelling around America through the 1850s. 
 
A feminist 
Sojourner was unusual in the abolitionist movement because of her insistence on the links between racism and sexism. In one of her speeches at the time she said: 
There is a great deal of stir about coloured men getting their rights but not a word about the coloured women’s theirs. You see, the coloured men will be masters over the women, and it will be just as bad as it was before. That was a radical statement, both for the women’s movement and the abolitionist movement. 
The women’s rights movement at that time was mainly middle-class and white. Sojourner spoke at women’s meetings and conferences, insisting that black and poor women were ‘women too’, and that they had to be included in any vision of social reform. Her most famous speech (known as Ain’t I a Woman?) pointed out that while white middle class women were trying to gain the right to work, Sojourner, and thousands of women like her, had known nothing but hard work and poverty all their lives. 
 
A campaigner  
Sojourner moved to Washington in 1863 when she was in her sixties. She worked to raise money for African-American Civil war soldiers, worked as a nurse and taught domestic skills to freed female slaves. She continued to be active in the women’s movement, and also in relief associations for freed slaves. She was even invited to visit President Lincoln. 
While she was living in Washington, her arm was dislocated by a conductor who refused to let her get on to a ‘white’ streetcar. She started and fought the campaign that ended segegated public transport in Washington. 
 
Sojourner Truth died in 1883 
 

Exercise 1
 
Put these events from Sojourner Truth’s life in chronological order. 
 
1. She began speaking publicly about abolition and women’s rights. 
2. She campaigned against segregated public transport. 
3. She changed her name. 
4. She got married. 
5. She joined a co-operative community. 
6. She preached at prayer meetings. 
7. She published her life story. 
8. She ran away. 
9. She was sold to a new owner. 
10. She worked as a domestic servant. 

Exercise 2 
Answer these questions taken from the groups 

a. In what year did Sojourner Truth escape from slavery?

b. What happened in 1850?

c. Why do you think she wanted rights for women as well as an end to slavery?

d. Why is she an important historical figure? Name three reasons 
 
 

Observacions i context

- Es divideix un text sobre la vida de Sojourner Truth en fragments. 
- Es reparteix una part a cada grup, que ha de resumir oralment a la resta de l'alumnat. 
- Amb la informació de tots els grups, l'alumnat ha de ser capaç de contestar a unes preguntes de comprensió, prèviament elaborades per cada grup, i ordenar per ordre cronològic unes frases donades a cada grup.
 
- El seu nom triat és altament simbòlic ja que en anglès sojourner és la forma agent del verb to sojourn, que significa residir temporalment; truth significa veritat. El compost sembla significar, doncs, La veritat del resident temporal
En 1997, el vehicle robòtic de la Missió del Mars Pathfinder de la NASA en el planeta Mart, va rebre el nom de Sojourner en honor a Sojourner Truth. 
 
 
Entre les primeres dones abolicionistes es troben: 
- Lucretia Mott (1793-1880). Va ser una defensora dels drets de la dona, pionera dins del moviment feminista, que va passar a la història, entre altres motius, per participar en l'organització de la Convenció de Seneca Falls. 
- Elizabeth Cady Stant (1815–1902). Sufragista i abolicionista estatunidenc que va participar en la Declaració de Seneca Falls. Va ser presidenta de la National American Woman Suffrage Association des de 1890 fins a 1892. 
- Maria Weston Chapman (1806-1885). Va ser una abolicionista estatunidenca. Triada per al comitè executiu de la Societat antiesclavista estatunidenca en 1839 i editora del periòdic antiesclavista The Non-Resistant
- Susan Brownell Anthony (1820-1906). Va ser una feminista sufragista, defensora dels drets humans i escriptora estatunidenca que va jugar un important paper en la lluita pels drets de la dona i el dret de vot femení en el segle XIX als Estats Units.

Descripció

Models contextuals i gèneres discursius d'ús comú en la comprensió d'escrits.

A partir de diferents fragments d'un text sobre Sojourner Truth, es contestaran una sèrie de preguntes. L'objectiu que es pretén aconseguir és la millora de la comprensió de textos escrits.

Resposta

Documents

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