Patriarchal Oppression In The Awakening, By Kate Chopin

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Patriarchal oppression has changed the way women live their lives, now there are norms within society that these women are expected to follow through with, for example, they cannot have any career other than being a housewife and taking care of the children. This is the issue with these ideas, it makes society “less human” because how can one gender completely look down upon the other and treat them like “slaves”, while like Donald Hall explains that it apparent in literary texts. In The Awakening by Kate Chopin, she portrays a woman who is breaking “free” from the expectations of society and revolting against them, but cannot control her actions. “The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin gives another example of a woman who is looking beyond what …show more content…

Women are not allowed to “chase” dreams, or in other words select what they would like to be in life, what career they would like and do as they please. But Men can “chase” their dreams, do what they would like in life and choose whatever career they would like. Whenever they see a woman attempting to do the same things they do in life, then all of a sudden they feel threatened and make it their mission to prohibit such events from happening. They make sure that women never move up in the world and stay put in the kitchen, never to abandon it since that would lead to unwanted consequences. Men see the act of a woman trying to be something other than what society has decided a woman should be, they do not believe a woman doing things other than housekeeping as “natural” or “normal”. They look at it as some sort of “sickness”, something “odd” or “weird”. When such things begin to spring up they feel obliged to exclude women from society. “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins illustrates how a woman could not write in a journal without her husband

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