In ‘A Room of One’s Own’, Woolf explicates the patriarchal system which evokes male dominance over women making them inferior in every aspect. She writes about some real-life encounters of gender discrimination she faced while exploring her thesis that for a woman to write fiction, she must have intellectual as well financial freedom. She makes use of logos, ethos, and pathos to make her argument more appealing to the readers. According to Aristotle, ethos is the most compelling factor out of three mentioned above because it appeals to one’s ethics, morals, and values. Therefore it is important for a writer to establish credibility early in the text.
Should names and labels put on people always be believed? If these labels are believed, is the name always true? Puritans, as a collective people should be exactly as they sound, pure. The reality of their society, however, is not. Some may say that they are perhaps the most judgmental and unaccepting society to have ever lived in America.
Many of the names were chosen from the bible on the day of a child’s birth. Letting God choose a child’s name shows a level of faith in the parents which often results in awkward and weird names. The use of the name, Magdalena called Lena, is similar to the phrasing in the bible in names like Simon called Peter. Toni Morrison put a lot of emphasis into the characters' names in Song of Solomon. The main characters' last name of Dead has a lot of emphasis.
In the novel The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle, the men she meets judge at first because she was a girl. In the beginning of the novel, Charlotte was a useless girl, but with hard work she did some of the crew's work. Charlotte, the only girl abord, went from wering the nice dress she had, to sailors clothing. Charlotte, at first was just at first along for the ride, but then became so important that she became the captain.
Mary Read simply embrace the identity of a male after her mother dressed her as a boy. Anne Bonny was also dressed as boy as a child and I think that also encouraged her to embrace the male lifestyle. I did think it was ironic that both Read and Bonny used the excuse of being pregnant to avoid execution, so in some ways their being women was actually an advantage to
Specifically, the women in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, take a small role in the novel, they are not given a plot line. They are often stereotyped as not being able to do the same things as men. The
An author may make use of a pseudonym for several reasons. With their writing becoming public comes a certain responsibility which the author had to accept. As Carby brings
Although one’s name might seem menial in the grand scheme of things, it is a crucial part of one’s identity. By choosing to take her first husband’s last name, she was choosing to be her own person, without the obvious connection to her family that followed her wherever she went. Choosing which name she wanted to go by gave her the power to define her relationships, both with her parents and her second husband. By separating herself from the Cibber name, she was allowing herself to make her career, as well as her identity, her own, without the overbearing influence of her
For example, in the Good Country People, the name of major characters: Mrs. Hopewell, Mrs. Freeman and Hulga, symbolize their personalities and served perfectly for the theme of the story. The name of “Hopewell” seems to refer to her positivistic outlook on life and her willingness to always hope for best, but it actually signifies a hopelessness to deal with the imperfections of the society and her relationship with her daughter, as her favorite sayings, “Nothing is perfect. ”(272) And the Mrs. Freeman’s name adds even more irony to the stories, as she is free from any type of incorrectness because she will “never be brought to admit herself wrong on any point”(271), and despite the fact that she is a slave and a woman, her actual freedom is extremely limited. Also the switch of names—from Joy to Hulga— for Mrs. Hopewell’s daughter, it changes the tone of the story.
Pseudonymity occurs when a literary work is written in the name of someone else, who is not identified as the writer (Bethel, n.d.). A literary work becomes pseudonymous when the author, and the date and place of composition is disputed (Harris, 2014, p. 387). Literature, written in someone’s name, other than that of the actual author, would be a crime today, but back in the days when the New Testament was composed, pseudonymity was a common practice.
S.E. Hinton has many more award-winning books and is happily living on a ranch in Tulsa, Oklahoma with her husband and continues to write S.E. Hinton is a pen name meaning that she assumed the name, S.E. Hinton, instead of using her real name, which is Susan Eloise Hinton. The reason why
Woolf suggests that having a room literally allows women to have their own space to write, but figuratively traps them in their own thoughts due to a lack of freedom. In the works of Jamaica Kincaid, Virginia Woolf, and Alice Walker, the female figures have shown how their own thoughts, reflection, and creativity could be used as a sense of freedom. In the short story, "Girl," by Jamaica Kincaid, the writer shows how an older adult misguided a girl. The adult in the story says," On Sundays try to walk like a lady and not like the slut you are so bent on becoming" (Kincaid 1340).
“‘Family” isn’t defined only by last names or blood. It’s defined by commitment and by love. It means showing up when they need it most. It means having each other’s backs. It means choosing to love each other even on those days when you struggle to like each other.
Jo, during the book, did not want to be referred or compared to a female. In her own personal thoughts, she was frustrated in female and male expectations. She wanted to be able to earn a living, for example a job made specifically for men. There were also times where Laurie didn’t want to be a man. He wanted to pursue music which was a feminine pursuit not a masculine pursuit.
One of the most significant works of feminist literary criticism, Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One`s Own”, explores both historical and contemporary literature written by women. Spending a day in the British Library, the narrator is disappointed that there are not enough books written by or even about women. Motivated by this lack of women’s literature and data about their lives, she decides to use her imagination and come up with her own characters and stories. After creating a tragic, but extraordinary gifted figure of Shakespeare’s sister and reflecting on the works of crucial 19th century women authors, the narrator moves on to the books by her contemporaries. So far, women were deprived of their own literary history, but now this heritage is starting to appear.