corner. A car struck her. Even though Louise placed herself in danger, she may still be able to…
During imprisonment, Cinque and family’s main priority is to get back to family and home, suffers extreme brutality…
The doctors told that her death was because she was so happy that she died, and it is sad that they got it completely wrong. None of them truly knew what was going on in Louise Mallard’s head before her death. She was filled with excitement about life and nobody was aware of the freedom she felt. It is hard to imagine a death where nobody truly knows about how someone feels.…
The film, Thelma and Louise, centers on the friendship of two women and their adventures to truly realize who they are as women. Thelma and Louise's road trip is a metaphor for the journey that their lives take through this film. The metaphor constantly seen throughout this film is empowerment, only gained through aggression. Most of this film is about the multitude forms that sexual violence can take. But, the further that Thelma and Louise travel on their trip, the more we can see them overcome these problems, from the violence done to Thelma, who married her boyfriend at the young age of 18, or even the past buried rape of Louise in Texas. This film is about the long-term effects that violence can take and the way that it can overtake somebody’s life.…
Firstly, the time period within the story is set plays a big role to the reader when it comes to understanding the woman’s mental state. During the period within the story is set, 1892, it was common for males to have a dictatorial presence. The reader sees this when John, the woman’s husband, ignores her pleas and opinions about her own mental condition, “If a physician of high standing, and one’s own husband, assures friends and relatives that there is really nothing the matter with one but temporary nervous depression—a slight hysterical tendency—what is one to do” (Gilman 297). Although John is a kind man, who only wants the best for his wife, it is due to his rational mindset that forces the women to keep all of her thoughts inwards; which eventually leads to her becoming a prisoner in her own mind due to no one will take her seriously.…
The relationship between Linda Loman and Dunstan Ramsey’s mother begins with the characteristics of their everyday lives. Linda’s character is a typical housewife of the late 1940’s, she is left with the responsibilities and the care of her husband Willy as he is going through a declining mental state. What mainly links Linda to the typical role of a silenced house wife is her unconditional love for her husband. While somewhat portrayed in control of Willy’s life and her own she is constantly belittled and degraded by her husband, although passive towards his attitude she is forced into a life of submission. Willy’s constant demands to silence Linda such as “Don’t interrupt!” (Act 1) in response to Linda’s question “Isn’t that wonderful?” (Act 1) in addition to “I’m so tired. Don’t talk anymore.”(Act 1) express his dominance as not only a male but his role as her husband. Her position is below the place of her husbands, and to his…
to be loved for her inner beauty causes her to elude the truth. Louise was so infatuated with…
How Desiree reacts and how she handles the situation with her husband leaving her and her child, you can better understand why Louise Mallord reacts the way she does about her husband's so called death. Desiree's story takes place in the late 1800s and that certain period of time is when women were to be considered better than the slaves but by a small margin. At that time the women had no say in anything and if they did say something nobody really listened to what they had to say. In "Desiree's Baby", her husband feels as if he has complete control over her and that whatever he says goes and there is no discussion about it whatsoever . Mrs. Louise Mallord feels the need to be independent and sheds no tears for her husband's death because it was as if her husband was restraining her from doing anything she wanted. Mrs. Mallord only wanted to be independent because, at that time, late 1900’s, women all around were doing their own thing and displaying a model that women can do anything, she was following the crowd and was wanting to fulfill her desires, but her late husband, Mr. Mallord was not letting her.…
The narrator’s husband is controlling and insensitive, purposefully confining his wife in order to force her to be dependent on him. In this story, it shows how he is being highly insensitive on the serious issue of his wife’s depression. John has her locked in a room, not letting her go out and see anybody until “she gets better”, “-and tell him how I wish he would let me go and make a visit to Cousin Henry and Julia. But he said I wasn’t able to go, nor able to stand it after I got there;” and “-and laid me on the bed, and sat by me and read to me till it tired my head. He said I was his darling and his comfort and all he had, and that I must take care of myself-” (pg.7) This is describing how John had her confined, the only company other…
story and ends up forcing her to go on a diet. Not wanting to have to let her mom down or fight with her Louise agrees to the diet, while secretly eating candy in her room alone. In addition to her low self esteem with her image, Louise also worries about her capability of finding happiness in a man. Of course her mother initiated this terrible thought with comments such as, “In five years you’ll be in high school and if you’re fat the boys won’t like you; they won’t ask you out” (Dubus 134). The mom shows the general feeling of social upper class outcast that the…
The joy that overcomes Louise is the result of her new discovered freedom. Since the socially constructed belief’s, regarding women, rejected the idea of women being free and or independent, Louise can only enjoy her freedom privately. “When she abandoned herself, a little whispered word escaped her slightly parted lips. She said it over and over under her breath: "free, free, free!" (Chopin 2). At this point is becomes apparent that she has gained some sense of autonomy. Although the thought of independence was forbidden Louise carries “herself unwittingly like a goddess of Victory” as she exists her bedroom.…
“Little Jean Louise never really knew her mother but Jem had, and he has been different ever since. Growing up for him has been quite emotional. At times he would sit in his room and just think about the day she passed away. Jem’s emotions have begun to influence Jean Louise as well. They are now both watching out to live long and clean lives and make appropriate decisions that don’t involve any form of prejudice.…
In Miss America By Day, Marilyn Van Derbur told her story of incest, that she experienced throughout her childhood. She explained how she was sexually abused by her father, from age 5 to the time she was 18 years old, when she was able to leave her home and go off to college. Marilyn wrote about how her father would come into her room, at least once a week, to molest or rape her. The visits became more frequent when she was a teenager. She would lie awake in her bed, curled up in a tight fetal position, anticipating when he would come into her room and violate her. When he would come in at night, she would pretend she was sleeping throughout the whole defilement. The waiting was very traumatic for her on its own, because even if he didn’t come in a particular night, she still wouldn’t be able to go to sleep or relax her body from the fear of his next “visit.”…
In the story “Eveline” by James Joyce, the main character Eveline is a young daughter of an abusive father. He is not physically abusive though, he is emotionally abusive. The scares of emotional abuse, though invisible, hurt harder and run deeper than physical scars. The Emotional and physiological abuse of Eveline’s father causes her/leads her to become in a paralyzed state of denial insecurity and guilt.…
| The conversation between author and Louise about marrying Louise’s daughter. In that conversation she allowed her daughter to merry to author’s friend. But also she said such thing would kill her.…