Feminism: Our Bite Is Worse Than Our Bark

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Feminism: Our Bite is worse than Our Bark
Travel back in time to where women have no rights and imagine how they would feel seeing all the things women are now capable of. How did society view women at the turn of the century? Women at the turn of the century with reference to “The Yellow Wallpaper” and “ A New England Nun”: treatment of women at the turn of century, societies view of women at the turn of the century, defeating the patriarchal society at the turn of the century. The essay covers the treatment of women, how society viewed them as a whole, and how they defeated the patriarchal culture of their time. Feminism was not about what most people thing feminism is about women striving for their basic rights, the equal rights come in to play later on. The treatment of women at the turn of the century. Women at this time were …show more content…

Their roles were to take care of the house, raise the children and entertain the guest. “Submissive wives, who followed the, advice not to retort an abusive husband, received praise and were supposedly rewarded with a happy home and a faithful husband. Assertive women were bound to be punished for violating the natural order of the universe” (Fortin). Women were not to speak out of turn they were to obey the husband fully, and if they didn’t they would surly face their husbands wrath. “Women were considered physically weaker yet morally superior to men, which meant that they were best suited to the domestic sphere” (Hughes). The quote shows that women were considered weak and fragile by their husbands and society. The two spheres of society are domestic and public, women were seen as to soft hearted to work in the public sphere with the men at times they participated in the finances of their husbands business, but their true role was the domestic sphere. Women’s voices were not heard they were thought to think in emotions and not inn knowledge, which they had little of

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