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Analysis Of The Novel ' The Help ' By Kathryn Stockett

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Betty Friedan wrote in her book, The Feminine Mystique, in the 1960s that "A woman today has been made to feel freakish and alone and guilty if, simply, she wants to be more than her husband 's wife". In The Help, by Kathryn Stockett, the women are divided by wealth and race, but are all held to expectations that have harmful consequences. White women are expected to stay at home and wait for their hardworking husbands, while some of them cook and clean during the wait. Other white women have hired assistance with housework, who in this novel consists entirely of black women. In order to survive financially, black women usually have no choice in their life, and are expected to be the white woman 's help. With these standards, members of this society struggle to conform and some openly defy them. As always, there are also those who conform to the standards, who in the case of The Help, are Hilly Holbrook and Elizabeth Leefolt, the epitome of white socialite housewives. As Celia Foote does, there are women who struggle in fulfilling these expectations, but desperately want to do so. Unlike these women, Skeeter Phelan has ambitions outside of being a housewife, and openly defies these standards. Within all of these women 's lives are their maids, who are women of color. Aibileen and Minny, being lower class African-American women, were both raised with the expectation of being maids. Seen in the diverse group of women in The Help, a society where women are expected to fulfill

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