Anne Bradstreet Research Paper

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Her Fading Façade of Domesticity
Anne Bradstreet was a British born poet of the 17th century, who was the first female writer to be published in the New World. Unlike Sarah Grimke, a feminist writer from the 19th century, Bradstreet’s poetry mainly focuses on womanhood and her experiences as a female. Because of the religious restrictions of her time period, her writing was relegated to gender specific topics like marriage, childbirth, mortally and death. Yet, like Grimke, Bradstreet struggled with her ostracism to the domestic sphere as a female in Puritanical America. The way in which Bradstreet professed her feminist ideals was soften by her husband, and subdued by the harsh religious environment in which she lived.
Anne Bradstreet’s form of feminism is subtler than writers like Sarah Grimke. Bradstreet had, as she stated, a “Dear and Loving Husband” whom may have not supported, but at least allowed her to write. However, …show more content…

Even if Bradstreet only wrote about feminine affairs, her poetry would have been very unbecoming for a proper Puritan woman. However, in this instance Bradstreet follows another of Grimke’s futuristic feminist ideals. The insight that Grimke perpetuates years after Bradstreet is that, “to him alone is woman bound to be in subjection, and to him alone is she accountable for the use of those talents which her Heavenly Father has entrusted her” (Amesbury, 7th Mo. 11th 1837, 37). While Bradstreet never directly broaches the topic of female accountability to men in her poetry, the fact that she wrote is evidence enough. In addition to the fact that she wrote at all, that she was published would have caused her notoriety in any Puritan society. Females stepping out of their sphere might have even been met with scorn from her fellow Puritans, especially if her later questioning of the Almighty fell into the hands of her zealous

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