Roles Of Women In The Yellow Wallpaper, And Trifles

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Gender is an important aspect of literature in the historical contexts of gender roles and expectations. Through literature, readers are able to learn about the roles and experiences of women in specific historical time periods. Authors throughout history have represented women in different ways, and have created an understanding about the challenges women faced and overcame. Through Editha, by William Dean Howells, The Yellow Wallpaper, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, A New England Nun, by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, and Trifles, by Susan Glaspell, the roles and development of women are depicted through their emotions and the world around them.
In Editha, William Dean Howells demonstrated how women were expected to keep their family on the right …show more content…

Gilman portrayed a lack of knowledge and empathy by the husband, and used the story to express how women viewed the importance and the upkeep of their societal roles. The Yellow Wallpaper tells the story of a woman with a mental illness and how she was stripped of her duties as a housewife and mother by her husband who was a doctor. Eventually, with nothing to do besides sleep and stare at “the yellow wallpaper,” the woman goes insane. The expression of her disappointment in not completing her wifely duties, which included taking care of the children, cleaning, and cooking shows that she lived in a time where women did not work and were only supposed to take care of things around the house. This reference to women’s roles in history shows that the story was written for a different time period in …show more content…

Wilkins Freeman, depicts history evolving and developing in the form of feminism. In the narrative, Louisa Ellis represents a contradiction to the norm of the period. Until the late 20th century, it was culturally common for women to marry and for their husbands to lead and control the household and property. That practice stripped women of personal freedoms and of their birthright. In A New England Nun, Louisa was the owner of her property as her parents and brother were deceased. She lived her life in a way that she pleased and did not like the idea of changing it as, “serenity and placid narrowness had become to her as the birthright itself” (Freeman 446). This indicated that independence was as significant as any property or possession, regardless of the norms of society. Louisa chose not to marry her fiancé of fifteen years and to hold on to her personal freedoms. After the engagement ended, “…she felt like a queen, who after fearing lest her domain be wrested away from her, sees it firmly insured in her possession” (Freeman 446). This narrative represents a shift in the cultural history of America for

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