Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Susan Glaspell s A Jury Of Her Peers And Flannery O ...
The oppression of women has occurred all throughout history across the world in the thousands of years that patriarchy has existed. During recent times as social standards have progressed, the voices of women are heard more often than long ago. Nonetheless, it is often overlooked that women of decades before used their voices in other ways in order to speak out against oppression. One of the ways these women did this was in their literary writing. Despite the progress made today to stand up against oppression of women, there is much that can be learned by looking back at problematic situations portrayed by women writers of the 19th and 20th centuries. Out of all of the texts written by women only three will be discussed; Rebecca Harding Davisââ¬â¢s Life in the Iron-Mills, Susan Glaspellââ¬â¢s A Jury of Her Peers and Flannery Oââ¬â¢Connorââ¬â¢s Good Country People, in which specific symbols are used as representations of the ways in which women were oppressed and how impor tant it is to study these texts today. By narrowing down the number of literary texts to three as well as discussing only one literary device from each, one can begin to understand the importance of learning about the American womenââ¬â¢s literary tradition. Beginning with Rebecca Harding Davisââ¬â¢s Life in the Iron-Mills, readers can find within the text a clear oppression of lower class peoples that is also an indirect oppression of women as lower-class individuals. Davis tells this story with a man named Hugh Wolfe as her main
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