Mary Wilkins Freeman's The Revolt Of Mother

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Another known regional writer from this time period is Mary Wilkins Freeman. Similar to Jewett, her texts use the New England geographical setting. Mary Wilkins Freeman’s short stories and novels are local color examples of the New England area in which she was born. Her works include the New England dialects and traits, components of the area’s Puritan roots, and portrayals of life in rural and penurious New England. During the time of Freeman’s writing, many farmers had begun to move west, particularly because of the spread of railroads. This caused the rural New England population to drop tremendously. Freeman’s protagonists are mainly elderly women or young women of marriageable age of families who remained behind in this New England post-Civil War setting. …show more content…

She is successful in doing this through the setting of the story and with the characters that fill the world of that time period. Just as most regionalist stories, “The Revolt of ‘Mother’” is set in a rural part of the country which is never really stated to the reader. She illustrates her setting choice with some literary realism aspects. For instance, when she describes the area around the Penn’s house as being “littered with farm wagons and piles of wood; on the edges, close to the fence and the house, the grass was a vivid green, and there were some dandelions”(Freeman). In this vivid description, she knowledgeably reveals the values of the region by including the wagons and wood. These items represent the hard work ethic known is this area. Freeman also uses the pretty setting to contrast Sarah Penn’s dark and repressed psychological landscape. Freeman could not have chosen any other setting because it would not have had much of a profound impact on the

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