Women And Literature: The Role Of Women In Literature

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Women in Literature: As women, we have always been taught by society to participate in gender binding roles. Up until recently in history women were always expected to be housewives, stay home, raise children, submit to their husbands and the list goes on. This was especially prominent in the late 1800’s, when women were expected to do more and restricted to less. Women of this era were basically chained to their expected duties and limited to amount of ambition they could have. Literature was a form of communication that enlightened women to open their mind to possibilities never thought of before. Few women tested and pushed the boundaries already set by society, but the ones who dared have shaped and paved the way for the opportunities women …show more content…

A colonial mansion, a hereditary estate. I would say a haunted house…” foreshadowing or indicating future events will take place. The main character is aware she is depressed after giving birth to a baby but disagrees with both her brother and husband about being isolated in a house. Regardless, she is taken away to be cured of her “illness”. The main character feels that instead of isolation, she needs to participate in activities that make her feel alive. These activities include things women didn’t normally do at that time, so she thought to be crazy by the men of her family. In telling the background story of the house, the main character once again states there is something abnormal about the house. When describing the room her husband finally chooses because she is not allowed to choose herself, she informs the reader on the stages the room has been thorough including a nursery in which she states: “for the windows are barred for little children, and there are rings and things in the walls.” Which logically doesn’t make sense if the room was previously a nursery. Throughout the whole story, the main character focuses primarily on the color of the wallpaper in the “nursery”, if the title doesn’t explain it enough, this indicates significant importance of the wallpaper symbolically in regards to the main character’s …show more content…

Vincent Millay, Millay was very active in the feminist movement much like the other two authors. Both she and her writing came to be the face of the liberated woman we know today. Although Love Is Not All was not written until 1931, Millay was born in the late 1800’s and lived during that time period when much of the same treatment was still alive and well. The poems starts out with stating everything love isn’t, what it can’t do, or what it can’t give you, giving off a negative view of love itself. Toward the end she says “I might be driven to sell your love for peace…” and ends with “I do not think I would.” Meaning that although it may not be able to provide much physically, its value is more than peace. Although Millay’s poem does not necessarily depict the exact main idea as the other two short stories, it is an extent of what the woman of that time should want and strive for such as love, marriage, etc. Although the poem begins with a negative tone, it ends by leaving the reader to decide exactly what Millay is trying to portray to her reader. Surprisingly this is effective because she is not completely denouncing love but she is not uplifting it either. She is allowing the reader to interpret and decide the message being conveyed, positively or negatively, while also giving off her trademark feministic views. By doing so, her poem is made less controversial than the other two short stories, and since it was

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