The stories that I've picked from this semester, to reflect about woman in the 17th and 19th centuries are, Coyote and the Buffalo which is very intriguing and has a very interesting back story to it, Little Woman a very strong book about woman and their dreams of becoming more, and, The world on the Turtles backs, amazing story about how the world began with the woman.
The World on the Turtles Back is a story of how the earth began and how life has become. For this story it comes out you wanting more, trying to figure out what's going to happen and how it will end. Now for the woman in the story, she is the main part of the story, she is the one that changed the story, the one who's ready to discover new things. The attitude towards
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the woman is strong for the woman. The story makes the woman very curios, strong minded, the one who changes the fait of the world. In this story there isn't any society except for her husband and the creatures around her. But for her she changes the world, getting a little bit of dirt making it into land which becomes the earth with vegetation and human beings living on this earth. This story makes the woman the savor, the one who isn't afraid of change, they made the woman have a good reason in this story. The social changes that were made was that woman made a world and that she was the one that brought life to it, she the woman that bought life not man, but woman. I really enjoyed this story and enjoyed the messages in this story and enjoyed learning how the world become the world. The Coyote and the Buffalo, amazing story, great message.
For this story it isn't very warm towards the woman in this story. It's very amusing how they gave the certain role to a woman. Very amusing. This story is mostly about a Coyote trying to make amends with the chief buffalo but then betrays his trust and is followed by consequences. In the middle of the story they coyote is enjoying his meal, when a old woman walks up to him saying "Sin-ka-lip", "you are a brave warrior, a great chief. Why should you do woman's work? Let me cook the bones while you rest." The coyote was flattered, believing she spoke her true mind, as he got settled and relaxed he saw the old lady running away with his meal. In this story, I think its implying that the woman was the devil shaming the wolf by taking what he's taken , but that's not right. The attitude towards the woman is false that she was bad that she acted like a man. In this society it expected the woman to make the food and give it to the coyote, not run off with it. The social change was how the woman double crossed the coyote, out thought him and then out ran him with the food, coyote thinking he can catch her because she's measly woman. This book was very interesting the message of the story was easy to understand and means a lot to a person if he/she understands it. But the part of the woman was very surprising and how they thought the woman should act in that …show more content…
century. Now Little Woman is the book to read about the perspective and attitudes of woman, its the perfect story for this assignment.
This book is about how this family try's to see their life a hopeful life (poor, happy and a father in the war) ) and makes it work out. The attitudes about these woman is amazing to read about, their ready for adventure, not caring if their poor while everyone is rich, the attitude is the right attitude for these girls, its the truth. The society expect the girls to behave themselves, go to school, have jobs, do their chores, always do the woman work and let the men do the men work and always respect others. Which in this book you can see what the society wants. The social change is big, one of the girls becomes a writer and moves away which in that century its very rare for a woman to become a writer. For the another girls she goes to Paris with her Aunt and becomes a painter, and then marries her best friend who is ten or more years older than her which is rare too. This book shows and describes about the woman and how they should be but than how they decide to take their own
paths. The story's that I had decided to pick to reflect on woman, I think these stories are perfect for it. They all describe and tell what needs to be told about woman and, how the authors see's woman in their own eyes, and how they write it in a story, how their perspective is different from other authors. Two of the stories are similar, Little Woman and The World on the Turtles back, these stories are about how woman make a change decide to change, not going by the rules and changes society. For the Coyote and Buffalo the perspective towards the woman comes on harsh that the woman should do her womanly job and that's all, but than takes a turn making the woman the one who is bad by making the wrong decisions, but she did brake the rules and did something other than her womanly job, not saying you should lie about something to get something without working for it. For these stories this is what I reflect on about woman in these stories. I feel like that there strong and meaningful, and that I hope that my perspective on these woman in the stories are hopefully correct and that they have meaning for others if they read this or read the stories that I have chosen.
It deals with obstacles in life and the ways they are over come. Even if you are different, there are ways for everyone to fit in. The injustices in this book are well written to inform a large audience at many age levels. The book is also a great choice for those people who cheers for the underdogs. It served to illustrate how the simple things in life can mean everything.
...approval by their family and the people around are considered as the most common trend between teenagers around the world and are used throughout the novel. Josephine was first introduced to the reading knowing that she was unsure of her identity and how she was searching for acceptance from her grandmother due to her illegitimacy. Marchetta created Josephine’s characteristic as one that the readers can truly understand and allow them to be able to feel a connection and a relation between the characters in the novel and themselves; it can make them realize that this is a social issues that each generation of teenagers face on a daily basis. The characters in the novel accompanied by the themes such as stereotypes and social statuses supported the author’s idea of creating a novel in which comment on the social issues and reflect reality within the novel.
This book teaches the importance of self-expression and independence. If we did not have these necessities, then life would be like those in this novel. Empty, redundant, and fearful of what is going on. The quotes above show how different life can be without our basic freedoms. This novel was very interesting and it shows, no matter how dismal a situation is, there is always a way out if you never give up, even if you have to do it alone.
In the age of industrialization when rural life gradually was destroyed, the author as a girl who spent most of her life in countryside could not help writing about it and what she focuses on in her story - femininity and masculinity, which themselves contain the symbolic meanings - come as no surprise.
According to “The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language”, the word “feminity” is defined as “the quality or condition of being feminine or a characteristic or trait traditionally held to be female.” Further speaking, feminity is formed by various socially-defined and biologically-created gender roles played by women influenced by a number of social and cultural factors. For example, the traditional gender roles of women include nurturer, birth giver, homemaker and caregiver. However, marked by a series of women's rights movements starting from the 19th century, women’s gender roles, as well as the ways how society and men perceive women, have been largely changed. This significant change, described as a process of female awakening, was widely reflected in many contemporary literature works. This essay will specifically focus on the construction of feminity in two short stories, “Hills Like White Elephants” by Ernest Hemingway and “The Stoy of an Hour” by Kate Chopin through examining how the authors define “feminity” in their treatment of female characters.
The author wanted to provide a realistic view of life in this era and also wanted to bring to life what everyday women felt like then. The subject and writing style could be seen as plain but that is to let you (the reader) be able to feel yourself in the time and place and thus be able to feel the emotional context of the events that happen to the charcters.
In conclusion, through these two characters Janie and Estrella, it is shown that social immobility is something that causes people to lose their innocence and become restricted. Through these two characters, the readers are able to women going through many instances of trouble, and overcoming the boundaries and restrictions. Janie shows the readers that materialistic marriages are bound to be inevitably unhappy in the end, and women can achieve happiness in a marriage through love and choice. Estrella in her own way shows how social immobility causes many problems for people in the migrant working social class but hope is something needed to overcome the demons and hardships in life.
This is an odd little book, but a very important one nonetheless. The story it tells is something like an extended parablethe style is plain, the characters are nearly stick figures, the story itself is contrived. And yet ... and yet, the story is powerful, distressing, even heartbreaking because the historical trend it describes is powerful, distressing, even heartbreaking.
...hem, and share these ideas with people who are less familiar with them. The settings of both authors allowed them to easily produce a work expressing their experiences. The techniques that the authors used placed the reader directly in the situation of these women. The inventions that the authors had for their writing were met by showing the misogyny in Egypt and encouraging the revolution that was occurring. Through the authors’ setting, the techniques used throughout their writing, and the similar goals that they set in their journey, both authors were able to produce written work in which one could draw many connections.
...r to the Beast during a card game. The father uses her as some kind of object and uses words like “pearl” and “treasure” to demonstrate how she is one. Carter uses these words to describe how the narrator is looked at for sale in the game the Beast and her father play as well. This shows shallowness of society's idea of a woman. According to society women were looked as dolls and they were winded up by their husbands and performed whatever tasks they wanted them to. Females appeared to not be able to think for themselves or be able to act upon their own natural instincts. Females also had to play this role of a doll by just using their appearance as a major feature in their marriage and doing what they were told by their husband without questioning it. In this story you see how the male gender has ownership over the female character and it was socially acceptable.
Change is the law of life. A person goes through different stages of life, and at every stage there is transformation in the personality of the person. This new individual is entirely different from the previous one. For this change, different circumstances and events are responsible. Alice Walker’s The Color Purple and Monica Ali’s Brick Lane are two texts of feminism in which we find the theme of evolution among the life of the characters like Celie and Nazneen who, happened to highlight the oppression of women in universal phenomenon irrespective of caste, creed, culture and nation. My paper is an attempt to study these two characters and see how their personality is evolved because of the different circumstances of life.
...the story he is inviting the reader to condemn the mistreatment of women and lack of freedom in the family particularly under the institution of marriage. The attitude of the author gives the story a condemning tone. The tone is appropriate for the theme which is a strained relations in the family and specifically in marriage relations.
The book traces or follows the life of men and women gender differences and common
I read this book out of interest for another Henry James piece, liking Daisy Miller so much. I found that this book, as in Daisy Miller, has a female point of interest throughout. Isabel Archer is a young American girl brought to Europe after her father has died in America. Isabel is an independent girl, easily noticed by many others in her circle. I felt that Isabel was a woman in her time, in that she took notice of things that she wouldn’t have without certain without the opportunities she was given. In America she would have see and done other things, but in Europe she saw so much opportunity. I like the carefree attitude she had, but with the regard for her elders and common courtesy. The example in the book about being a proper young lady when it was not looked at very well that she stay up ‘alone’ with her cousin and another young man. She had asked her aunt to help her and tell her when she is doing, or about to do something saw as improper. I admired that. I think nowadays young women would revolt against proper if it meant something they did not wish to do.
Doris Lessing is definitely one of the most instrumental women writers in the 20th century. In the year 1962, her chef-d'oeuvre The Golden Notebook was published. It is regarded as the companion volume of Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex. The novel soon becomes popular among the feminists because of its realistic description about women’s independence, consciousness and their living condition. This paper has been written with the aim to interpret The Golden Notebook from feminist perspective. Theme, structure, characters, narrative style of the novel serves well for feminist interpretation. The very structure of the novel makes the theme reach; it reflects not only the fragmentation of Anna’s inner world, but also the chaotic society she lives in. Doris Lessing employed woman as the first person narrator of the novel. She has certainly served as spokeswoman for women’s rights in her life and work. After women have gotten the license, tremendous phenomenon directly illustrate a series of problems in women’s political life. Compared to traditional women, the ‘Free Women’ of The Golden Notebook enjoys free professional life, but they don’t get deserved happiness although they walked out bravely from the kitchen. The relationship between women and children is also a big issue in the crusade of feminism. Feminism has successfully provided the equality of parental rights to women. But the right couldn’t produce harmonious relationship in the lack of ‘fathers’ protection’ between women and children. Lessing’s novel tells us that males are not the enemies of women but they are their collaborators.