women’s literature lecture

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Women’s Literature Lecture AP Literature K. Shimabukuro

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Page 1: Women’s literature lecture

Women’s Literature LectureAP LiteratureK. Shimabukuro

Page 2: Women’s literature lecture

Background Women weren’t educated (widespread)

until the 19th century, so literature up and until that point is male dominated.

Women had strict societal roles Did not include voicing their opinion Or holding jobs (such as writing) These roles were enforced with severe

consequences By male family members (fathers, husbands,

brothers)

Page 3: Women’s literature lecture

History (Britain) We take for granted that women can choose whether or not to

marry, and whether or not to have children, and how many.

Women of the mid-19th century had no such choices. Most lived in a state little better than slavery.

They had to obey men, because in most cases men held all the resources and women had no independent means of subsistence.

A wealthy widow or spinster was a lucky exception. A woman who remained single would attract social disapproval

and pity. She could not have children or cohabit with a man: the social

penalties were simply too high. Nor could she follow a profession, since they were all closed to

women.

Page 4: Women’s literature lecture

More History Girls received less education than boys,

were barred from universities, and could obtain only low-paid jobs.

Women's sole purpose was to marry and reproduce.

At mid-century women outnumbered men by 360,000 (9.14m and 8.78m) and thirty percent of women over 20 were unmarried. In the colonies men were in the majority, and

spinsters were encouraged to emigrate

Page 5: Women’s literature lecture

Women’s Lives in America During the early history of the United States, a man virtually owned

his wife and children as he did his material possessions. If a poor man chose to send his children to the poorhouse, the mother

was legally defenseless to object. Some communities, however, modified the common law to allow women

to act as lawyers in the courts, to sue for property, and to own property in their own names if their husbands agreed.

Equity law, which developed in England, emphasized the principle of equal rights rather than tradition. Equity law had a liberalizing effect upon the legal rights of women in the

United States. For instance, a woman could sue her husband. Mississippi in 1839,

followed by New York in 1848 and Massachusetts in 1854, passed laws allowing married women to own property separate from their husbands.

In divorce law, however, generally the divorced husband kept legal control of both children and property.

Page 6: Women’s literature lecture

More… In the 19th century, women began working outside their homes in

large numbers, notably in textile mills and garment shops. In poorly ventilated, crowded rooms women (and children) worked for as

long as 12 hours a day. Great Britain passed a ten-hour-day law for women and children in 1847,

but in the United States it was not until the 1910s that the states began to pass legislation limiting working hours and improving working conditions of women and children.

Eventually, however, some of these labor laws were seen as restricting the rights of working women. For instance, laws prohibiting women from working more than an eight-

hour day or from working at night effectively prevented women from holding many jobs, particularly supervisory positions, that might require overtime work.

Laws in some states prohibited women from lifting weights above a certain amount varying from as little as 15 pounds (7 kilograms) again barring women from many jobs.

Page 7: Women’s literature lecture

Women and the Industrial Age

Page 8: Women’s literature lecture

Women and Psychiatry Women were committed for many

reasons: epileptics, alcoholics, drug addicts, and a

variety of other deviants or social nonconformists

“loose women” To read more about this topic, click here:

Adobe Acrobat Document

Page 9: Women’s literature lecture

19th Century Women Writers Emily Dickinson Kate Chopin Nellie Bly Harriet Beecher Stowe Charlotte Perkins Gilman

Page 10: Women’s literature lecture

Issues in Women’s Writing Lack of power, control Sexuality Abuse Family

Children and Birth control Social roles

Motherhood and Marriage In reaction against Victorian ideals

Page 11: Women’s literature lecture

Works Cited British History Background slide Women in America Background slide