Cunningham's Treatment Of Women In The Hours

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In the novel The Hours by Michael Cunningham, he talks about three women’s thoughts within in their lives and how they get through their conflicts. In this essay it will mainly focus on the storyline about Laura Brown, a mother of a 3 year old son and wife of Dan Brown. Mentally Laura is still trying to find who she really is and constantly overthinking the issue at hand, which makes her conclude that it defines her as a person. When she was younger, she was not considered “popular”, but a bookworm and is unsettled why her husband who is considered to be popular to be so content with everything that is happening in his life. The thoughts of focusing on what is already there should be the first priority for Laura Brown or she will end of drowning …show more content…

However, she seem very lost and does not know where to begin and is looking at her husband as a guide. She can tell that her husband is content with his life and family and only see the beautiful aspects of his wife and son, which Laura would constantly deny that she is not putting as much effort for the family than he is. Her husband does not really understand that Laura is feeling this way, because she is contradicting her actions by covering her true feelings as a housewife and is always in a constant state of anxiety. The only happiness she can find is her son, because she know she cannot compare with him since he is still growing as an individual, but should actually learn from her son that it is okay to make mistakes and move forward as a wiser individual. However, in the end she is still lost, “be nothing but a floating intelligence; not even a brain inside a skull, just a presence that perceives, as a ghost might.” (215) She will keep on allowing herself to be pushed around by her environment, only nobody will even notice because all her conflicts present in her own mind, she starts to fight with only