Probably not. She probably viewed him as someone who was keeping her just for entertainment and she was mostly concerned on how to get out of his grasp.
However, consider this. On the Sail Barge, en route to the would-be execution of her friends, Leia was standing some 6+ feet away from Jabba's throne, when he yanked her chain. At first she gave him a defiant glare (further confirming the above theory), but when Jabba tugged again, Leia was pulled back from the window.
What we see in the film appears to be her "being pulled close" to him; however, slowing it down to frame-by-frame glances, we can see that Leia had to turn around, run to the throne, jump up onto it, straighten up before Jabba, and subsequently press her lower body up against his belly before leaning in...and only then does she turn her head away.
This suggests that she knew how to respond to Jabba's chain-yanking, making an automatic reaction of coming to him and pressing up close; she was too far away to be simply "pulled to" him. This active response would indicate that she had become accustomed to Jabba's advances, furthering the possibility that perhaps, yes, she DID view him as her superior...or, as the question phrased it, her "Master."
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point of view is when people see from the front page
Most of the facts are historically accurate; however, many of the over-arching themes are not. For example, the movie leaves readers with the impression that the Africans were freed because the court determines them to be people, not property. In reality, the courts did view them as property but freed them because it was proven that they were taken from Africa, and the slave trade there was outlawed at that time.
That depends. If the story is fictional, or not real, then the point of view is most likely of the protagonist or main character. Some books which use 3rd person or 3rd person omnipresent don't have a point of view or change points of views from character to character. (1st person is from the protagonist's point of view, 2nd is from you, or the reader's point of view and is very uncommon, and 3rd person or 3rd person omnipresent is from multiple points of view, constantly changing or from an omnipresent point of view, or a point of view where you the reader can see everything that's going on) If it's non fiction, or a book on something real, then the point of view is most likely always from the person the book is about, or 3rd person, again. If you can't tell where the point of view is, just look at which character the book is writing about.
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