A growing business, the Ferdinand News employed many local residents including one in particular. As one of the first female linotypes of her time, Mary Ann Potter, did exceptional actions throughout her lifetime; however, having achieved many of her greatest accomplishments at a young age, Mary Ann passed down characteristics that she valued most to her family. One core value that sticks out is her will to work hard. She portrayed this value by diligently learning how to operate the linotype machine, making her one of the few women able to accomplish this feat.…
For centuries, society defined women using their generational stereotypes. According to Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, the woman’s social status progression and digression needs to be investigated. Her book, “Good Wives”, expands on what societal stereotypes created the ideal women in 17th and 18th century New England. Ulrich approached the topic with a virtually unbiased opinion and attempted to explore all socio-economic classes to relay deeper understanding of pre-modern gender roles.…
James Holmes is portrayed as evil, described as being an animal, as well as being severely mentally ill. He compares with the stereotype of other mass shooters because all mass shooters have a well thought out plan on what they do and where they go once they commit the crime and that is exactly what he did. The one thing that separates him from the exact stereotype is that he was completely calm and felt no need to rush even when he was approached by law enforcement as he was taking his time to get away from the scene. James Holmes basically committed premeditated manslaughter. This man absolutely fits the profile associated with shooters. To begin with, the man was already not mentally stable and he committed such a heinous…
Women are thought of as children, specifically “girls”, juxtaposed in conjunction with nature’s beauty, mythicized as unique beings illuminated with magic and deceit, and overall needy materialistic creatures. Such common stereotypes of women are portrayed in Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s Lady Audley’s Secret through the character, Lady Audley, who emanates child-like qualities and thought processes, but actually shares the same calculative logic as a male counterpart would stereotypically “have”. Throughout the novel, the narrator (Braddon), often describes Lady Audley in a magical manner, highlighting her physical characteristics by using vivid and bright colors and often comparing Lady Audley to the physical environment, whether it be explicitly,…
As time passed the newspapers were sending out equations and detectives would follow upon them. For example it was said that Lizzie went to a drug store in attempt to buy a diluted sample of very deadly prussic acid 36 hours before the murders(Walter 64). It was thought that she poisoned her family since she was the only one in the household to not get sick, but like most claims they all lead to a dead end. It seems as if the press sent police on a wild goose chase to either prove Lizzie's innocence or find the person responsible. None of the evidence held up in court. Soon the press made it a battle of masculine versus feminine. During this time period women were seen as emotional beings that acted off of their feelings and not off of logic and so a in the minds of men, women did not have the potential to kill not only one person, but two, and not leave a single trace. Lizzie Borden made people question gender norms and rethink what women could possible be capable of. Women were seen as weak compared to men and had little rights. Femininity was defined by possessing qualities traditionally attributed to women such as demureness(Collins English Dictionary). Demureness means to be modest and reserved in manner or behavior(American Heritage Dictionary). Lizzie did posses qualities of a woman but most of all her demeanor throughout the entire case said otherwise. Her reaction to the death of her parents was almost…
Ken Kesey, via his narrator Chief Bromden, introduces the battle between individuality and conformity as well as the issue of mental illness. What a lot of people overlook is the aspect of exploitation of women in the book. The novel was written in the early 1960s, when the second-wave feminism began, which expanded the focus to a variety of aspects such as family, workplace, and sexuality, and devoted to gain social equality regardless of sex (Rampton). In response, Ken Kesey explores a society that is ruled by women to reflect how males are damaged both physically and mentally under such control. In One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Nurse Ratched’s lack of femininity and the consequences of the matriarchy reflect…
“It’s a fact that more women read Jane Austen than men”, says Vic, a blogger. One might want to know why, so an individual might research and discover that many men say the real reason they do not like Jane Austen is because, “ the main characters are girls and I am a guy” blaming the reason that they do not like her works on the bases of it not being relatable. In actuality, men do not like Austen because she depicts men as exactly what they are. In her novel Sense and Sensibility, there is John Dashwood who is characterized as an easily tempted man who does not think for himself. There is also, John Willoughby and Edward Farris who start off as good guys…
Another stereotype of gender is found in Snow White. The princess is perceived as a beautiful, faire, young lady who is nothing like the typical woman you would find in America, living in the woods in solitude who loves to cook and clean up after the dwarves. This idea is similar to that of women having to stay in the house and clean up and cook for the family, and not being able to have a life outside of the home as anything but a caretaker. This idea of women having to stay in the house goes hand in hand with…
A man might say women aren't meant for combat, while a woman might say men do nothing but watch sports. Such expressions represent gender stereotypes, which are over-generalizations about the characteristics of an entire group based on gender. While women were barred from serving in military combat in Western nations until the latter half of the 20th century, in recent times they have served in combat roles as capably as men. And while many men may watch sports, not all men would necessarily do so.…
However, it can be argued that gender roles and stereotypes were socially constructed and exist up to today because it is not easy to escape centuries of false beliefs in a matter of a hundred years. Jean Baudrillard says, “It is the generation by models of a real without origin or reality: a hyperreal. It is a hyperreal, produced from a radiating synthesis of combinatory models in a hyperspace without atmosphere. [Gender stereotypes are a simulacrum because their existence fully depends on whether or not people believe in their existence. This simulacrum is so deeply ingrained in the society that it come to represent the actual reality for people of all genders]” (2-3). Therefore, for a person to stop acting referring to their gender roles is to accept that they are, in fact, socially constructed hyperreality. Naturally, it can be extremely hard to do considering that a person was brought up with such values and behaved in accordance to them. It requires some knowledge and willingness to accept gender stereotypes as a…
Just as men have stereotypes, women have them too. Female stereotypes are a bit more negative than a male’s considering terms and conditions were very different for women back in the day. A stereotypical woman is someone who: is a poor driver, is mad because she is on her period, can’t succeed in sports, can’t…
Gender stereotypes need to be stomped out and vanish. Everyone is who they are for a reason, and that’s because no one else is like you. But today, everyone goes with what’s in through the media. Being thin, having a lot of makeup caked on and doing your hair all the time, and men be super manly on tv/commercials. Cooking, beauty, and masculinity are three of most likely hundreds of more stereotypes that have been addressed in not just my paper, but…
In all these versions, readers or viewers find a common thread to all. The wicked stepmother and siblings are either punished or forgiven, while the sweet, gracious, and beautiful Cinderella marries the prince, and as such escapes her miserable life. According to this tale, marriage is the ultimate goal in life especially for the woman. In Cinderella, all the maidens in town go to the ball just to marry the prince. Even Cinderella desires to go because she sees marriage to the prince as the solution to her problem. “The ideological and psychological pattern and message of either Perrault’s or the Grimms’ Cinderella do nothing more than reinforce sexist values and a Puritan ethos that serves a society which fosters competition and achievement for survival” (Breaking the Magic 195). And this applies to the other two versions in this analysis. Women are typecast as incomplete and invisible without the prince, who obviously is a wealthy archetype. There is a certain important message in Cinderella that is most profitable to marry a rich man, because it earns the woman respect and dignity.…
The example is that used of the troll in the dungeon, where Hermione is reduced to a cowering and powerless which is typically seen as a female trait. Although Hermione does gain her power back, she does need saving but her logic challenges this binary as she saves her friends twice. Rowling with the character of Hermione also challenges the irrational, emotional binary that is often found in children’s literature. Not only can Hermione be vulnerable and emotional but she is rewarded for her ‘cool use of logic in the face of fire’ What Rowling seeks to do is to develop the gender stereotypes, specifically with female characters. The use of logic negates her powerlessness, challenging the stereotype as ‘cool’ and ‘logic’ are in juxtaposition to her ‘sobbing’ character. The first book of the series is a beginning of a journey for each character, Hermione begins by seemingly being bossy and a know it all “Are you sure that’s a real spell?” Said the girl. “Well it’s not very good, is it?’(Rowling pg. 79) Yet it is her intelligence and gift for magic that does what is stereotypically seen as a male role to ‘save the…
People use the word all the time, but rarely is the word given boundaries for each scenario. In its broadest definition, it is “an often unfair and untrue belief that many people have about all people or things with a particular characteristic” (“Stereotype”). One of the most common examples of gender stereotyping in the workplace is the management assigning tasks requiring a forceful approach to men and tasks needing a gentle, more personable touch to women. Other common gender stereotypes include but are not limited to differentiating pay between men and women, promoting employees based on gender, and selecting men over women in the hiring process based on the likelihood of maternity leave. Edgar Vinacke, a former psychology professor at the State University of New York at Buffalo and author for Encyclopædia Britannica, defines stereotypes as an “obstacle to effective thinking” (Vinacke) . Therefore, it is logical to say that if stereotypes are present in the working environment, then performance and employee welfare will be greatly reduced. He also states many people develop stereotypes during their childhood years from the influences in their environment and it becomes very difficult to change that way of thinking later in life (Vinacke). This means that any stereotype a person has is most likely rooted from something completely separate from what they are stereotyping in the present. For the purposes of this argument, stereotypes, no…