Patriarcal Society During The Victorian Era

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The Victorian Era started when Queen Victoria took the throne in 1837 and ended roughly the day she died in 1901. Victorian England “was a strictly patriarchal society” (Yildirim 2). It is common knowledge that during the Victorian era men and women had their own specific roles. It is also common knowledge to know that men had complete legal and economical control over the women (Mitchell 1, 142). Women were expected to stay at home to keep house and take care of the children.
“Men inhabit the public sphere, and women, the private” (231) . With that in mind the men and women of the Victorian Era lived in two different worlds. “…Males were active and independent, whereas females were passive and were dependent on males…”(231) Women were to be skilled in the home and men were to be out at work. Men in the public’s eye were to be strong, independent, dominant, and in control (232) . As the reader will observe Mr. James Windibank fits that description perfectly. Women at home were to be quiet, subordinate, and over all viewed as weak by men (233).
If a person reads Sherlock Holmes stories and takes an in depth look at the characters, they will notice that there are female and male characters that do and do not follow the roles that are in order during the Victorian era. Female characters that follow the typical female role are Mary Sutherland, who appears in “A Case of Identity” and Mary Morstan, who appears in “The Sign of the Four”. In contrast to the typical female role is Irene Adler, who is a character in “A Scandal in Bohemia”, she is not your typical stay at home, proper woman during this time. Just like the women, there are proper male gender roles in Victorian England and like the female there are characters who do and...

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2 EDITORS.. 2005 Sage publications Thousand Oaks Michael S. Kimmel, Jeff Hearn, R.W.

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