Vindication Of The Rights Of Women Essay

509 Words2 Pages

Women nowadays are more or less equal to men in may aspects and are treated with a whole new respect but they didn't start off this way. They were once thought of as useless, uneducated, housewives whose jobs were to cook, clean, and raise children. That was it, until women decided to express their feelings of oppression through poetry and stories. This encouraged women to show that they have a voice and to make a change to show they can do what men do. Women then over time fought for the right to vote, work jobs men did, and get paid while also bearing children and so much more. The story, “A Vindication of the Rights of Women” by Mary Wollstonecraft is about overcoming the ways in which women in her time are oppressed and denied their potential in society, with concomitant problems for their households and society as a whole. And the four poems by Kate Chopin, Emily Dickinson, Louise Bogan, and Lucille Clifton also have a lot to explain about their feminism. In The Story of an Hour by Kate Chopin, the author wrote “ I love man as my …show more content…

As in the poem, This Morning by Lucille Clifton, the author wrote a very powerful message. “I met myself coming in a bright jungle girl shining and all day i have been a black bell ringing, i survive survive survive.” This is a message to women that they should find and express who they really are and love themselves and never to change. In another poem, Women by Louise Bogan, the author wrote “They cannot think of so many crops to a field or of clean wood cleft by an axe. Their love is eager meaningless too tense, or too lax.” which tells women that they don't know anything and aren't of any use which is why they are to stay home and do what is their job. To cook clean and make/tend to their

Open Document