Misogyny in Horror

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The horror/fantasy genre is a misogynistic place. For centuries women have been oppressed by men's ideas of what a woman should be like: domestic, obedient, married, and lower on the totem pole. Women are trapped within their surroundings. In “The Haunting of Hill House” Eleanor can't bear to be out of the house. There is an innate fear of women, which helps create these horrific stories. While there are very few stories that empower women, Gilman's “The Yellow Wallpaper” is a story that does. Gilman even says herself that this story was meant “to save people from being driven crazy.” This story is made even more of an example, because it is strongly based on Ms. Gilman's own struggles. Stories like Freeman's “Luella Miller” only instill the misogynist attitudes that writers such as Gilman try to overcome in this genre. Little improvement has been made, because even in modern times women are oppressed by their roles in the genre. Overall, our patriarchal society exerts its dominance through fiction by setting our viewpoint to despise and fear a woman who isn't the ideal woman, a woman who isn't submissive at all costs.

There is no denying that the horror genre is riddled with misogynistic morals and ideals. From the time of the Ancient Greeks society has been patriarchal. The man is the ruler of the house, the bread-winner, the hero. The men are the ones who leave the house, have lives outside the house, and breathe the fresh air. They used to be the only ones allowed to vote. The United States, the home of democracy, still has yet to have a female president. Men are the ones promoted, the ones who hold higher jobs, the ones more preferred in the workplace. Needless to say, since the men run things of course the women are goin...

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