The Devil refused and executed Tom’s wife. When Tom gets there and recognizes his wife’s cloth hanging from a tree, he does not sympathize for her. Instead, he was ecstatic because now he would be able to reclaim his silver. When Tom realizes there was no silver, he is melancholy, he lost his silver, but not his wife. Personally, I did not see the misogyny in this story because it did not have anything to with prejudice against women, it had more to do with greediness. Furthermore, in The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, it has been said that women were seen more as objects than human beings. In comparison to Rip Van Winkle, women were thought to be in the kitchen and the caregivers of the children. Then again, I do not foresee this as misogynist because that is how women were portrayed in that era.
Moreover, women in American Literature are associated with nature and fertility because their biological, reproductive function is their primary role. Therefore, Washington Irving was not a misogynist for portraying women in such way, it was just an aspect of the time period. In today’s generation, women are independent and are seen as equals to men; this is where all the arguments come from. People now do not understand how drastic times have changed from Washington Irving’s