Besides illustrating how discrimination is being depicted towards black women in a time of slavery, Sojourner Truth also comments on how there should be no line between genders no matter the race, by addressing this matter it began to reach to a larger audience. Sojourner Truth begins by comparing the white American man to a black women slave, “[l]ook at me! Look at my arm! I have ploughed and planted, and gathered into barns, and no man could head me! And ain’t I am women?” (Truth), by Truth comparing herself to the average white American man, it begins to bridge similarities between the two. It brings the idea that women in American are worthy of having the same rights and privileges a man has; men are seen as superior beings based on that they work long hours, therefore, providing for their …show more content…
If one lives in a society when white individuals are seen as superior and have majority power, minorities (e.g. blacks) will not challenge such idea based on the fact that society as a whole has accepted what is going on in their surroundings. Therefore, why to challenge the status quo. However, Sojourner Truth challenges such ideal within her speech, she mentions men’s mentality on the topic of equal rights in her speech: “women can’t have as much rights as men, ‘cause Christ wasn’t a women!” Sojourner Truth then responds to such claim by stating: “[w]here did your Christ come from? Where did your Christ come from? From God and a women! Man had nothing to do with Him” (Truth), she is challenging man’s idea towards equality, rather yet, she is addressing the nation as whole. Man in this part of the speech were given the role of being a greater being than women, however, by Sojourner Truth addressing the idea of reproduction and childbirth and how they were fundamental to bringing Christ into this world; she begins to diminish their role as a men and add importance to the role women