Subordination Essays

  • Free Yellow Wallpaper Essays: Women's Subordination

    905 Words  | 2 Pages

    Women's Subordination in The Yellow Wallpaper "The Yellow Wallpaper," written in 1892 by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is a chilling study of insanity. It is a bitter story of a young woman driven to insanity by a "loving" husband-doctor, who imposes Mitchell's "rest cure."1 This short story vividly reflects a woman in torment. This story starts out with a hysterical woman who is overprotected by her "loving" husband John. She is taken to a summer home to recover from a nervous condition. She

  • The Complexity of William Blake's Poetry

    1056 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Complexity of William Blake's Poetry Northrop Frye, in his critical essay, "Poetry and Design," states; "In a world as specialized as ours, concentration on one gift and a rigorous subordination of all others is practically a moral principle" (Frye 137). William Blake's refusal to follow this moral principle by putting his poetry before his art, or vice versa, makes his work extraordinary as well as complex and ambiguous. Although critics attempt to juggle Blake's equally impressive talents

  • The Corrupt Patriarchal Society of Jane Smiley's A Thousand Acres

    767 Words  | 2 Pages

    different perspectives. One of the particular strengths of the novel lies in its depiction of the place of women in a predominantly patriarchal culture.  In this male dominated culture, the values privileged in women include silence and subordination.  Ginny is acceptable as a woman as long as she remains "oblivious" (121).  She is allowed to disagree with men, contingent upon her doing so without fighting (104).  Ultimately, her opinion as a woman remains irrelevant.  Ginny remarks, "of course

  • The Benevolent Master

    2096 Words  | 5 Pages

    and saw themselves as responsible for completing this task. Paternalism transformed the relationship of slave and master into one of child and parent. In such cases the slave may have been spared the abuse of a cruel master, but suffered no less subordination. A benevolent master created a comfortable environment for slaves, ultimately producing complacent, submissive slaves. This injustice is articulated in,Black Women in Nineteenth Century American Life, "servitude was likely to foster dependence

  • Gender Equality and the Law

    1057 Words  | 3 Pages

    was unconstitutional. It was Ginsburg’s goal to make the Court realize that “the law’s differential treatment of men and women, rationalized as reflecting “natural” differences between the sexes, historically had tended to contribute to women’s subordination” (Ginsburg 11). Ginsburg carefully selected cases which she felt would produce the greatest results. To do this, she “pursue(d) a series of cases that illuminate(d) the most common instances of gender distinctions in the law (Ginsburg 14). In three

  • The Dialectic of Desire in the Films of Nicholas Ray

    3158 Words  | 7 Pages

    The Dialectic of Desire in the Films of Nicholas Ray Nicholas Ray's films frequently address a competition between a 'father' and 'son' (whether literal or figurative filial relationship). More importantly, Ray has an ideological approach to these struggles. In his films, homosocial struggles are always supplanted by Ray's desired outcome of an idealized heterosexual coupling. That is, the threat of prolonged homosocial desire between his characters is usually eradicated by the death of one

  • Analysis Of The Kingdom Of Mat

    1436 Words  | 3 Pages

    dissolution of power and wealth , patriarchal roles were reinforced by men leading their families into church and all the authority figures being male. They were taught that God governed the world through fixed relationships of dominance and subordination. It is because of Matthew's refusal to give up his position as male leader and provider for his family, even when they were destitute, that led to his descent into lunacy leaving his family in eighteen thirty one. This is why women and economic

  • Is Pornography Good?

    848 Words  | 2 Pages

    there. Then you have the feminist viewpoint which totally disagrees. Two well known feminists, Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin have their own view and definition on pornography. þ....Pornography is the graphic sexually explicit subordination of women, whether in pictures or in words, that also includes one or more of the following: (i) Women are presented dehumanized as sexual objects, things, or commodities; or (ii) women are presented as sexual objects who enjoy pain or mutilation;

  • Definition of Military Discipline

    894 Words  | 2 Pages

    Definition of Military Discipline Military Discipline is a state of order and obedience existing within a command. It involves the ready subordination of the will of the individual for the good of the group. Military discipline is an extension and specialized application of the discipline demands habitual but reasoned obedience that preserves initiative and functions unfalteringly even in the absence of the commander. Discipline is created within a command by instilling a sense of confidence

  • High Heels

    3484 Words  | 7 Pages

    High Heels "To be carried by shoes, winged by them. To wear dreams on one's feet is to begin to give reality to one's dreams." -Roger Vivier Shoes of every make and style are loved by women across the globe but it is the heel, whether stiletto or platform that is coveted, adored, desired in such abundance simply in and of the shoe itself. They're everywhere. They run rampant in books, calendars, photographs, album and movie covers, dangling in miniature precious metal versions from earlobes

  • Homelessness in the Jane and Finch Area of Toronto

    1968 Words  | 4 Pages

    some people may enjoy one activity, others pay not. Leisure is all about personal interests and what people constitute having a good time is all about. Some may say that the process of working class leisure can be seen to contribute their own subordination as well as the reproduction of capitalist class relations. Self-produced patterns of working class leisure can lead to resistance to such reproduction. This leads to social class relations and inequalities, and the fact that it they can never be

  • Fascism

    1927 Words  | 4 Pages

    What is Fascism? Fascism is a 20th century form of nationalistic, militaristic, totalitarian dictatorship that seeks to create a feasible society through strict regimentation of national and individual lives. Total subordination to the service of the state and unquestioning loyalty to its leader would adjust conflicting interests. It is a modern political ideology that looks to regenerate the social, economic, and cultural life of a country by basing it on a heightened sense of national belonging

  • The Themes of Euripides' Medea

    1977 Words  | 4 Pages

    children.  They could not vote, own property, or choose a husband, and had to be represented by men in all legal proceedings.  In some ways, these Greek women were almost like slaves.  There is a definite relationship between this subordination of women and what transpires in the play.  Jason decides that he wants to divorce Medea and marry the princess of Corinth, casting Medea aside as if they had never been married.  This sort of activity was acceptable by Greek standards

  • Feminist Theory

    2695 Words  | 6 Pages

    self-respect or the lack there of. This is what we have come to know as feminism. Feminism refers to the body of thought on the cause and nature of women's disadvantaged and subordinate position in society, and efforts to minimize and eliminate the subordination (Hughes, 2002:160). Understanding that the need for independency and self-respect is not a real disease, it is just a metaphor for how women go about trying to achieve them. "For nearly one hundred and fifty years, women have fought for equality

  • Racial Equality and the Abolition of Slavery in France

    1395 Words  | 3 Pages

    to acquire it… (56). Condorcet employs the technique of de/humanizing his subjects to display the arbitrary nature of slavery. Moderates, slaves, and whites-anyone could achieve slave status under these random means. Society needs to prevent subordination. The white Condorcet speaks almost in apostrophe; the style of his introduction greatly resembles an ode. Addressing the slaves in this manner gives even more deference to the lowly slaves. Similarly, the slaves have been elevated to "My Friends

  • My Forbidden Face by Latifa

    855 Words  | 2 Pages

    and/or killed is one way that the book correlates with the class. Other examples are subordination of women, veiling, and keeping women out of the public eye. The Taliban are very extreme in their treatment of women; in fact, it is almost as if they are living in the very distant past. Lerner talked about how slavery came about because of the subordination of women. The Taliban have achieved the subordination stage, but have not yet gotten to the point where there is slavery. "We are impure-but

  • Regaining Control in Anna Karenina

    2239 Words  | 5 Pages

    her choices as a woman. She becomes resentful of the society she lives in, and turns that frustration on the unsympathetic Vronsky, who retains his own freedom as well as control over her own happiness. She is too proud and passionate to live in subordination, as Dolly Oblonsky does. Anna cannot conceive of going on indefinitely as she has been, and at the same time can take no pleasure from contemplation of her past, or her future, which holds no prospect of change. Feeling trapped and untrue to her

  • Portia's Power in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice

    2454 Words  | 5 Pages

    were expected to concern themselves with marriage and motherhood only, and to submit themselves to their fathers and then their husbands in all ways. Considered "weaker vessels," women were not held to have either "strength or constancy of mind." Subordination, submission, and skill in caregiving were valued in women, and they we... ... middle of paper ... ...ligent, and sometimes vicious character, in her society it is not acceptable for her to be a strong, intelligent, vicious woman. Sadly, Portia's

  • The Subjugation of Women in The Yellow Wallpaper

    2534 Words  | 6 Pages

    Literature of the period often characterized women as oppressed by society, as well as by the male influences in their lives. The Yellow Wallpaper presents the tragic story of a woman's descent into depression and madness. Gilman once wrote "Women's subordination will only end when women lead the struggle for their own autonomy, thereby freeing man as well as themselves, because man suffers from the distortions that come from dominance, just as women are scarred by the subjugation imposed upon them" (Lane

  • The Power of Heart of Darkness and A Passage to India

    2849 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Power of Heart of Darkness and A Passage to India John A. McClure writes in Kipling and Conrad that "as the twentieth century opened, the artists and intellectuals of the age increasingly came to believe that imperial rule, if inevitable in the short run, was an inglorious enterprise that deformed both those who ruled and those who submitted" (153). Joseph Conrad and E. M. Forster were among these artists and each expressed their misgivings about the "inglorious enterprise" and its