Sojourner Truth’s famous speech “Ain’t I a Woman” was an extemporaneous speech given on May 29th, 1851 at the Women’s Convention in Akron, Ohio. Truth gave the speech to call attention to the lack of rights held by her as a black woman; she represented a double minority group.
The question “Ain’t I a Woman?” is repeated often in the most widely recognized version of Truth’s speech. She begins her speech by listing the actions men take to protect white women, such as helping them into carriages, lifting them over mud puddles, and giving up their seats. She states that as a black woman, she was never offered those privileges, and wasn’t she a woman, too?
The second point she makes lists the endless aspects of her life where