Saturday, October 12, 2019
Comparing Suppression of Women in Feminine Mystique, Radicalesbians, an
Suppression of Women through Isolation in The Feminine Mystique, Radicalesbians, and Trifles It is far easier to break the spirit of one human being than that of a united group of people. Betty Friedanââ¬â¢s "The Feminine Mystique", "Radicalesbians", and Susan Glaspellââ¬â¢s "Trifles" come to the same conclusion: isolation and separation caused women to be vulnerable to domination by male society. Social stigmatization by men, an inability to describe the situation, and a lack of personal identity kept women apart from one another. A fear of social stigma was one factor that kept women from supporting each other. In "The Feminine Mystique", Betty Friedan discusses how American housewives went about their daily lives "afraid to ask even of herself the silent question ââ¬â ââ¬ËIs this all?ââ¬â¢" Women were told that family, a husband, and children would bring them fulfillment and when it didnââ¬â¢t, they were afraid to admit that they werenââ¬â¢t happy. Freidanââ¬â¢s white, middle-class housewives were afraid of living outside the feminine ideal they had grown up heari...
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