Patriarchal Societies Essays

  • Essay on Condemnation of a Patriarchal Society in Yellow Wallpaper

    875 Words  | 2 Pages

    Condemnation of a Patriarchal Society in The Yellow Wallpaper Charlotte Perkins Gilman was crafty. Taken at face value, her short work, The Yellow Wallpaper, is simply the diary of a woman going through a mental breakdown. The wallpaper itself is the arbitrary object on which a troubled mind is obsessively fixated. The fact that Gilman herself suffered from a nervous breakdown makes this interpretation seem quite viable. This explanation is, however, dead wrong. The wallpaper is not merely

  • Women and the Patriarchal Society in Michael Cunningham's The Hours

    1057 Words  | 3 Pages

    Women Pressured by the Demands of a Patriarchal Society in Michael Cunningham's The Hours In Michael Cunningham's The Hours, Laura Brown, one of the novel's protagonists, is trapped by the responsibility of being a housewife and mother. Cunningham's story uses one of Virginia Woolf's works, Mrs. Dalloway, as a template to weave the lives of three women together in a narrative delicately split into three branching tales that echo each other. One branch of the story leads to a fictional account

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

    767 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Corrupt Patriarchal Society of A Thousand Acres Jane Smiley's A Thousand Acres tells a dark tale of a corrupt patriarchal society which operates through concealment.  It is a story in which the characters attempt to manipulate one another through the secrets they possess and the subsequent revelation of those secrets.  In her novel, Smiley gives us a very simple moral regarding this patriarchal society: women who remain financially and emotionally dependent on men decay; those able to break

  • Patriarchal Society and the Feminine Self in Kate Chopin's Story of an Hour

    1768 Words  | 4 Pages

    Patriarchal Society and the Erasure of the Feminine Self in The Story of an Hour Critical readings of Chopin’s works often note the tension between female characters and the society that surrounds them.  Margaret Bauer suggests that Chopin is concerned with exploring the “dynamic interrelation between women and men, women and patriarchy, even women and women” (146).  Often, critics focus on the importance of conflict in these works and the way in which Chopin uses gender constraints on two levels

  • Women's Roles in Silko's Yellow Woman and Chopin's The Story of an Hour

    502 Words  | 2 Pages

    beloved, whom she doesn't know well. However, afterwards she decides to come back home, to her family: husband, baby and relatives. This story may look superficial, but is contains deeper meaning, and truths about roles of women, traditional patriarchal society, and attitudes toward feminism. "Yellow Woman" shows the role of a woman in a traditional, average family; narrator is a married young female raising a baby and living together with parents and grandparents. We may assume that she doesn't

  • Sexism in Language

    1977 Words  | 4 Pages

    understanding the opposite sex. However, a close look at our language may show that there is more to the communication barrier between the sexes than meets the eye. I believe that the English language is very biased towards women. We live in a patriarchal society, an “order characterized by male dominance and the means of perpetuating that dominance”. Because of this, our language has been molded mostly by males, resulting in this “sexism in language” (Spender, 1980). This did not happen overnight. Instead

  • Addie Bundren in William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying

    2833 Words  | 6 Pages

    anything but words that represent the oppressive patriarchal society to which she is opposed, early criticism only evaluated her in these terms, focusing less on Addie’s first person narrative, and more on what other characters in the novel (the men) had to say about her. However, the changing social and political tides of the 1960’s and 1970’s gave rise to feminist criticism, which was at least partially able to break out of the patriarchal infrastructure, and evaluate her under a new

  • Antigone – The First Feminist

    553 Words  | 2 Pages

    movement started, most of it is attributed to the past two centuries. However, women who are feminists have been around much longer. In Sophocles’s Antigone, the main character (Antigone) acts as a protofeminist by defying the authority of a patriarchal society and taking action according to what she believes is right in her heart. She even shows some characteristics of a modern feminist. Feminists today are viewed as raging, man-hating bitches, but feminism in its true sense simply advocates women’s

  • Themes of Hannah Webster Foster’s The Croquette

    1369 Words  | 3 Pages

    critics have given their attention to The Coquette for critical analysis and praise. These critics have focused on facets of the novel that were completely ignored until the last twenty years. The themes critics discuss include the injustices of patriarchal culture, societal attitudes, the depiction of an economy of vision, treatment of language and the role of the female circle. It is obvious modern critics have delved below the surface of the sentimental novel to extract meaningful themes and information

  • A Feminist Perspective of Fern Leaves from Fanny’s Portfolio

    1630 Words  | 4 Pages

    from Fanny’s Portfolio Judith Fetterly describes the fiction of Fanny Fern as basically conservative due to the seeming resignation to the institution of marriage. She claims that Parton’s work is safe and makes only small challenges to the patriarchal institutions of her day. I do not see this in my reading of "Fern Leaves from Fanny’s Portfolio." I hear the voice of a woman who recognizes the problems with patriarchy and who does not flinch from revealing them. I found her writing to be bold

  • A Feminist Reading of Galatea 2.2

    881 Words  | 2 Pages

    novels written by males; their female characters are always depicted as the stereotypical female: weak, indecisive and emotionally unstable. The feminist approach to analyzing literature provides an explanation for this phenomenon. In this patriarchal society, women are viewed as the weaker sex, inferior. This can be the result of socialization or some negative interactions with women in the past. Richard Powers employs this standard for female characters in his novel, Galatea 2.2, made evident through

  • Exploring The Role Of Capulet In Reomeo And Juliet

    1524 Words  | 4 Pages

    think. After he calls for his sword his wife responds by saying, sarcastically, “A crutch, a crutch! Why call you for a sword?” representing that she is teasing him of his age, even a women in the patriarchal society she is set in. This would be extremely embarrassing for the leader of a family in that society, and would in most occasions not be tolerated. The “!” shows her confidence in saying this which would have been rare for a women. In Act 1 Scene 2, on the contrary to Scene 1, Capulet is calm

  • Male and Female Relations in Virginia Woolf's To The Lighthouse

    2883 Words  | 6 Pages

    suffer from the unequal division of gender power in Woolf's society. Lily is also very much a product of society, yet she has new ideas for the role of women and produces one answer to the problems of gender power. Besides providing these examples of patriarchy, To The Lighthouse examines the tenacity of human relationships in general, producing a novel with twists, turns, problems, and perhaps a solution. Mrs. Ramsey is the perfect, patriarchal woman. She scarcely has an identity of her own. Her life

  • Subtle Feminist Assertions in The Yellow Wallpaper

    1180 Words  | 3 Pages

    Subtle Feminist Assertions in The Yellow Wallpaper Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper " was originally shunned by the American patriarchal literary powers present before the turn of the century. Despite editors' hesitation, Gilman's determination eventually led to the story's publication in New England Magazine in 1892. It was not until the early 1970's, however, that the story was adopted by the feminist literary movement and viewed as the author undoubtedly intended. A popularly

  • aunt jennifer tigers

    1236 Words  | 3 Pages

    the panel that she made Will go on striding, proud and unafraid. • The first stanza sets the setting for Aunt Jennifer’s dream world for her and her tigers (Aunt Jennifer represents all women who are caught under the oppressive hand of a patriarchal society). Aunt Jennifer’s tigers represent what women desired to be like during that time period. The tigers are do not fear men and as depicted on line four are heroic and conduct themselves in a manly fashion. These confidents tigers represent everything

  • Conflict between Individuality and Conformity in The Bell Jar

    2050 Words  | 5 Pages

    Conflict between Individuality and Conformity in The Bell Jar In Sylvia Plath's novel The Bell Jar, Esther Greenwood seems incapable of healthy relationships with other women. She is trapped in a patriarchal society with rigid expectations of womanhood. The cost of transgressing social norms is isolation, institutionalization and a lost identity as woman. The struggle for an individual identity under this regime is enough to drive a person to the verge of suicide. Given the oppressive system

  • Empowerment of Women in Much Ado About Nothing, As You Like It, and The Taming of the Shrew

    1718 Words  | 4 Pages

    controlled outright, by the men in their lives: fathers, uncles, suitors, husbands.  And yet, there are women inhabiting Shakespeare’s comedic world who seem to enjoy a greater degree of autonomy and personal power than one would expect in a patriarchal society.  Superficially, therefore, Shakespeare’s comedies appear to send mixed signals regarding the notion of female empowerment.  Some women are strong and independent, others are completely submissive, and the behavior of either seems to be influenced

  • Gender Politics in the US Criminal Justice System

    1723 Words  | 4 Pages

    sphere of domesticity with the public sphere of society and the criminal justice system's attempt to keep women within the boundaries of the private. For centuries women who have entered the justice system have been oppressed, because the system was and still is a system designed by a patriarchal society and implemented primarily to control wayward males. The witch hunts in 17th century New England, is the first of many examples in which society exerted control over women by labeling them 'witches

  • Canterbury Tales Essay - The Assertive and Vulnerable Wife of Bath

    1324 Words  | 3 Pages

    Bath Society was different in Chaucer's time; males dominated and women were suppressed.  The manipulative and destructive nature of women was emphasized by men. Much like Eve in the Bible, women were blamed for the 'downfall of man'. Through the Wife of Bath, Chaucer investigates the difficulty of self-realization for a woman in this restrictive environment.  The wife of bath, Alison, represents antifeminist stereotypes and searches for happiness and a place in a patriarchal society.  Unfortunately

  • A Feminist Perspective of Atwood's Surfacing

    2906 Words  | 6 Pages

    ecological treatise" by critics, Margaret Atwood's Surfacing reflects the politics and issues of the postmodern society (Hutcheon 145). The narrator of the story (who remains nameless) returns to the undeveloped island that she grew up on to search for her missing father; in the process, she unmasks the dualities and inconsistencies in both her personal life and her patriarchal society. Through the struggle to reclaim her identity and roots, the Surfacer begins a psychological journey that leads