Sexism In Kate Chopin's The Captured Woman

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The Captured Woman focuses on telling the story strictly through dialogue. Sexism plays a huge role from my standpoint of the piece. From what I understood of the reading, the narrator and his “friends” abduct women as a sort of ownership game, competitive for the bragging rights of which women is better than the rest. I never got a true read on the narrator since he is never identified - nor are any of the other characters since they all have sorts of pseudonyms (think “Q” or “M”); the woman is only ever described her her gender. The captured woman has a controlling and vain personality, as seen with her wanting her own pictures all over the walls of the house. I don’t know why, but I got a strange sense that even though the captured woman is a captured - abducted - woman, she is the one calling the shots. It plays around with critical …show more content…

The story did a total 180 because by the end, the abductor is more like the abductee of the situation - or even the victim in some sick twisted sense? - and the women is the one repressing him. Perhaps that was for a satirical “all-women-are” type of joke. A Good Man is Hard to Find dealt with some really vigorous religious beliefs. I really don’t know anything about religion, so some of the metaphors and analogies went completely over my head. The grandmother is someone that I do not like; it was because of her and her deceiving ways that they ended up in the fatal situation at the end. This type of story is the kind for some deep reading, so bare with me. I understood the theme of no matter what the crime, the punishment is all the same. That’s what The Misfit contends for. All the characters of the family are crappy people - the parents being neglectful of their children, the

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