Did you know that in 1900, only 19% of women in the U.S. held jobs? By 1998, this number had nearly tripled to 60%! During the early 1900’s women didn’t realize their full potential or their role in society as females. The theme I am going to analyze is the journey that the women in two stories experience as they search for their personal identities. Both “A Pair of Silk Stockings” by Kate Chopin and “The Chrysanthemums” by John Steinbeck deal with the journey to one’s identity, but they do so in different ways.…
The interaction between genders, importance of female education, and hardships of life seem to be a language that can be relatable to most women. As the world continues to change, the roles women play in literature will continue to be a great easel for the evolution of gender roles. If I were to take an even further view into women in literature, I would try to see how the circumstances of the lives of women writers play on their depictions of the world in their…
Author Margaret Atwood’s writing has been shaped by one particular movement- the push for women’s rights in the 1960s and 1970s. When Atwood was a college student, “a woman was expected to follow one path: to marry in her early 20s, start a family quickly, and devote her life to homemaking” (“The 1960s-70s”). Employers assumed that the females who did work would soon become pregnant, so ladies were unlikely to advance in their careers. What money they did earn was controlled by their husbands, or their male wardens, as females are legally subject to them. With the development of the birth control pill a few years later, women could now chase professional careers and “the double standard that allowed premarital sex for men but prohibited…
Although the tone in the poem is often light-hearted, the author, Anne Bradstreet, is very critical of those who restrict women's roles. This is because women can do much more than sew and cook. The speaker is a writer, an avid reader, and well-educated. She's ready to go to war with those who attack her, but is also gracious enough to let things go once she's made…
The aspirations and expectations of women are explored wherein the contexts of Letters to Alice and Pride and Prejudice present women in different circumstances with varying opportunities. The changes of context between these two texts alter the situations of women and their predominant values.…
I will be analyzing Virginia Woolf’s “Professions for Women”. In Virginia Woolf’s essay she talks about the obstacles of being a woman in the workforce. She explains how societies expectations of how a women should be and how that expectation holds back women from expressing themselves freely. In the essay, I believe she is trying to achieve the goal of shedding some light of the obstacles for women and how that should be overcome. She wants to show how she overcame her issues in her work and how women have overcome those issues paving the way for women today. Her claim is that women should break free from society’s standards for women to achieve their professional goals in life.…
The second part of the essay is mainly devoted to women. The author, upon reaching university, becomes aware of the criticisms heaped upon men by the women there. (327) Up until this point, he had thought that women were creatures of leisure, with time to visit friends and read books. He admits that women often “suffer from the bullying of men,” (327) and how they either fill thankless jobs at restaurants or as…
Take Jane Addams for example. Ms. Addams took advantage of the improved climate towards the female opinion by writing about social injustice and war. This is a zenith in women’s literature where the prose of women is judged on the content of their writing instead of the gender behind the hand that wrote it. During this time frame we also see great work being done by the likes of Emily Dickenson and a revolution in appreciation for Jane Austen’s work. We see during the middle 1800’s the women’s suffrage movement relying on the excellent works and efforts from the previous 40 years of women advocates to invigorate their zeal for progression, unifying the…
Robert Berg, (My dad) is just one of the adults who have had a positive impact on my life. Robert Berg works at Mercy Medical Center as a radiologist (A type of doctor that reads X-rays). He is 50 years old and went to college for 17 years. Despite being 50 Robert still runs, bikes and swims regularly. Robert Berg has been a positive influence on my life since the day I was born because he encourages learning, gives good advice, and is always there for anyone who needs him.…
Writing has been and always will be a crucial part in any culture around the globe. Humans have used writing for many things such as documenting history, communicating, developing letters of the law, and last but certainly now least, creating works of fiction and imagination. However, historically, writing has always had a more masculine connotation, but now in today’s time, women have shattered through this stereotype and made their presence known in the literary field. One of these women include Zora Neale Hurston. She made her appearance during the Harlem Renaissance—a predominantly African American cultural movement of the 1920s and 1930s. During her lifetime, Hurston enjoyed a measure of fame, followed by a long eclipse. Her works reflect…
It can be said that society has always been quite judgmental, and at times misguided when it comes to women. The negative perceptions that society has towards females are often times directly related toward her actions. What a female does seems to degrade her identity and capabilities in the eyes of some men. In the poems “The Lady’s Dressing Room” and The essay “A Modest Proposal” by Jonathan Swift, we can see both authors use of tone, form and style to develop their works. These poems are mainly driven by men’s attitudes towards women. A man’s perceived opinion about women can negatively shape society’s views and perceptions of them.…
Almost every man who walks this planet has goals, aims, and, aspirations that he dreams of achieving. However, distractions often come about, thwarting people and preventing them from attaining their aspirations. A distraction can pull a person’s whole mind and body into a different world manipulating him to neglect his lifelong goals, and never achieve his dreams. A student, entering college with dreams of achieving a 4.0 GPA and becoming valedictorian, can easily be swept up by social distractions, causing him to abandon his goals. Tillie Olsen and Anne Tyler both discus in their narratives, “Silences”, and, “Still Just Writing”, how parenting, childrearing, and mundane errands effected their lifelong dreams of becoming writers. They both believe that women cannot possibly create “enduring literature” unless they remain childless. However, Olsen and Tyler each viewed her own personal situation through different perspectives. Their different perspectives on life led them to each deal with her lifelong dreams and desires of becoming authors in different ways.…
“In the 1960s, ardent young women joined ardent young men clamoring for civil rights reforms, peace, nuclear disarmament, sexual freedoms, equality, offbeat religions, and legalized pot.” She continues with, “Late in the twentieth century, the restless, opinionated women found an outlet in energies in jobs, the kind of jobs described as careers, and this may the world safer for the establishment. Who would stand and shout on a soapbox when a senior partner…
Women’s roles in the workplace were also changing. Their slow shift from the house to factories was drastic and resulted in the women’s place being more prominent in society. Women worked hard, as can be seen in Document B, a letter from a Lowell mill girl. She describes her fourteen hour day shifts as better than what girls could expect. A woman’s wages were usually only half of a man’s and her work were almost intolerable, but they were earning their own money for the first time.…
The 1950s housewife has gone through decades of change and revolution and emerged the modern career woman of today; she has exchanged her cookbook for the Constitution and put down her oven mitt to grab a briefcase. Women’s lifestyles are changing to fit new careers, education and family structures, and their role in society is being adjusted accordingly. Women’s desire to advance their career requires commitment and dedication to years of competition and relentless work…Today the modern career woman, equipped with a rich education and a powerful drive, boasts a different image than her female predecessors. The…