“Nothing is Impossible to a Determined Woman” Looking back into the 1800s the role of women was very simple, they took care of the children, the house and the husband. They cooked, cleaned, sewed and taught the girls how to be a good wife and mother one day. Once women were married that was their life, they could not own any property and if they did they would have to give it to their husband. However, if you were unmarried; you could own property, sue people or in fact even be sued. If you were not married a very popular occupation during this time was to be a Civil War nurse. The free African Americans served as cooks, laundry women and cleaned the hospitals. Women had a pretty strenuous life back then, they did everything except make the …show more content…
In a lot of ways the books went against the culture of this time period, how Jo was a tomboy and didn’t want to be in the eye of society and act like they wanted her to. However, there were many ways that it did relate to the culture to the 19th century. One of the main themes was family, and with that was wanting the girls to marry off and start a family of their own. Marmee (Mrs. March) teaches them that they should have a loving husband and family because that is the greatest joy a woman could have. Marmee would have discussions with the girls about how they need to provide for their husbands and their duties to their husbands and children. This relates to the way that women were in the beginning of the 1800s. On the other side; Jo shows more of the rebellion against the culture she grew up in, she was a writer trying to gain her independence and support her family. She grew up in a family where everyone was well educated, opinionated, accomplished girls who were treated with great respect in their homes. The limitations set on them just because they were girls, were constantly and strongly expressed by Jo. She wanted to be able to do as the boys do; run, skate, ride and go on …show more content…
Amy and you changed places in my heart, that’s all. I think it was meant to be so, and would have come about naturally, if I had waited, as you tried to make me; but I never could be patient, and so I got a heartache. I was a boy then, headstrong and violent; and it took a hard lesson to show me my mistake. For it was one, Jo, as you said, and I found it out, after making a fool of myself…” - Laurie to Jo 406 The book in general relates to the time period in which it was written, it shows all the gender inequalities and how each character dealt with that. She shows the adversities that each person had to overcome during the time of the Civil War. One of her quotes that I think really sums up this book is, “I am not afraid of the storms, for I am learning how to sail my ships.” To me this means that in the book she was not afraid to be different, to like things that the boys did even though it was not acceptable. She did what she wanted because she was growing as a person. She was a determined woman and put her mind to the impossible and accomplished it. Alcott, used a lot of the influences of her family in this book, which I think is a really great thing. One of the main things in this book is the idea of family, she takes the influences of her family and emphasizes and plays them into the story. She is not only a strong woman with great influences, but also a strong
These two examples support the theme by tying into context what men thought of women and how women were not as equal as men back in the 1900s. They also support the theme by explaining to the reader how Jane expressed herself and what her opinion is on her rights as a
Kirsten E. Woods wrote Masterful Women. This book was published by The University of North Carolina Press in 2003, and is a nonfiction historical book that is 198 pages long, without the notes and focuses on the struggles and accomplishments of slaveholding widows during the American Revolution through the Civil War (1765-1865). Women didn’t have any major rights until they were widowed, due to women being viewed as vulnerable and fully dependent on men. In this book, Kirsten Woods argues that women were viewed as dependent on men and they could not do anything for themselves. As a reader goes on through this book women prove that this statement is incorrect and women can therefore do most everything that a man can do.
They were indentured servants who worked as temporary labor to pay off their passage debt. They worked in the fields alongside various other racial groups who also came from Europe like the Italians and Irish. They all slept together and ate together. These blacks had the same rights as everyone else. They could run for political office, vote, and marry anyone they wanted, regardless of race.
The African American women were both sellers and buyers. The marketplace was a medium where the women were able to converse and also a place where reputations could be built or destroyed. Many of the free women of color held different jobs including seamstresses, washers, bakers and shopkeepers. Unlike enslaved women free black women were able to move from selling products to being a shopkeeper which was considered a socially respected profession. They ran businesses that in different extents depended on the enslaved women they owned.
She goes through several overwhelming events that left me anxious. Sometimes I cannot comprehend the logic behind slavery, based on the reading. Jacob had to live in fear of Dr. Flint, she could not marry her lover, and is not seen as a whole person, but rather someone’s property. I definitely agree that her life seems horrible, and
This quote explains the first time Sarah has truly felt relief and free from any burden or judgment she endures from her abolitionist opinions. Sarah’s time away from her mother and prejudice town gives her the time and space to grow and truly become individualized. Sarah’s actions of rebelment shows that she is independent and true to herself by being able to go against her Truong 4 mother and live for herself, going against her family’s ways of living. To add on, Nina Grimke follows in Sarah’s footsteps, rebelling against their family’s lifestyle but more boldly. Nina refusing to be accepted into the church that the Grimkes attend and causes implications between Nina, Missus, and the Minister.
The north wanted to free slaves and the south wanted to keep slaves with slave keepers. This novel was helping basic work for the civil war. It was helping by letting people know what happens to black slaves. Even after they were free people still treated them like they were trash. Haveing people write down while people only bathroom and blacks only bathroom.
Jane is forced into submission by a domineering husband, symbolizing a more external force, perhaps representing the outside powers that exert control over women 's place in society. In modern times, you can see that women 's rights have improved significantly since the beginning of the 1900s. For example, in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, there have been many more opportunities for women to make progress in education, jobs, and in achieving the right to vote. To break the chains of the oppression of women, we need to be aware of what women are capable of doing, and realistically accept that they can be as successful as men in all areas
It tells of how people and things can be helpful in life, although can turn out to be something negative and dangerous. It also shows that what people believe is not always true, and that things will not just get handed to people, everyone has to work for it. It demonstrates this with the character, “The Boy,” she encounters him in the woods after she had just sat to rest. He appears with a plate of cake, when she reaches, it was not there, he was never there just a part of her
There was this stereotype for women in the past were they were characterized as weak, domestic, social., dependent, pure, timid, not sensual an emotional, susceptible to hysteria. This stereotype meant that the role of women in society was mostly to marry young to become a wife and be financially supported by her husband. All these women were bound to the property law which stipulated that a married women did not have a separate legal existence from her husband. A married woman was to stay home and focus on caring for their husband, children and the house, this was considered as the ideal American society. Motherhood was the highest calling a women could aspire in that period.
The societal and political atmosphere for women was severely limited; women were expected to be homemakers and were frowned upon for working outside of the home if they were married1. They could
In the years of the Civil War, African Americans played an important role in contributing to the Union Army and the confederate army. A great deal of African American men volunteered to join the Union Army but only after they gained freedom did they participate in fighting the war. Besides the Union Army, there was the confederate army which consisted of slave labor whom were forced to aid the confederacy following their masters. Later in the war, the Confederacy ran short on men and were in need to supply soldiers, leaving no choice but to enlist the colored men. Not only were African American men impacted from the war, but African American women also served to supply and aid in the war.
It honestly only took a couple of pages to convince me that some of the things going on at the time should never be forgotten, no matter how ferocious. She doesn’t ask for her readers to pity her, or call out her persecutors, but detail her courageous journey to freedom, which anyone can be inspired by. I think her purpose in writing this memoir, along with my reasoning above, was to talk about the great corrupting power that slavery is. As soon as a man feels like he is superior to another man, his morals are destroyed until they become monsters.
Many of the young women had a subordinate social status and were seen as others in society as the majority were African American or from immigrant families (15). This new behavior escalated the judgment and the desire of society to reform them and turn them into good, respectable women. The women often came from bad home lives and went to the streets in search of a life different from what their family could provide (17). Young women were “fascinated with stylish dress” and wanted material things (22). As women in the working class with low paying jobs, they did not have a lot of leisure time to engage in these activities and longed for the freedom.
It may skew her thinking and at times be subjective. The intended audience is someone who is studying literature and interested in how women are portrayed in novels in the 19th century. The organization of the article allows anyone to be capable of reading it.