This book relates to Their Eyes Were Watching God by having both the protagonist married at a young age and them taking interest in someone else. Like Janie, the character of Andrea is in a sexual affair with someone who makes them feel new and different. These people bring light into their lives.
A constant problem in society is the different beliefs of what women should do and how they should act and how they should look. People want women to have large chests and butts and a small waist, but these are simply unrealistic. There billions of women on this earth and not people are the same. A line from one of Maya Angelou’s famous poem Human Family read, “I know ten thousand women/called Jane and Mary Jane,/ but I've not seen any two/ who
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Female sexuality” (Foster 135-136.) The female body is a highly exploited object in today’s society, “... a young, preferably virginal female; a stripping away of her youth, energy, virtue; a continuance of the life force of the old man; the death or destruction of the young woman” (Foster 19.) During the Greek and Roman empire the female body was celebrated and flaunted, but a virginal female was still valued and expected of an unmarried woman. Centuries later in England, the female is hidden by many layers of clothing to hide their body, but to also emphasise different parts of their body such as their waist. As we get into the 21st century we can see women more carefree. They wear what makes them feel comfortable and what makes them feel confident. Nowadays we can also see women in touch with their inner self. They aren’t held down by men or social norms. They are now free to be and do whatever they want with their bodies. Thomas Foster, author of How to Read Literature Like a Professor, mentions how the author Angela Carter test the boundaries,“Carter nearly always intends to upset the …show more content…
Katie L. Love writes in her article Black Feminism: An Integrated Review of Literature, “The experiences of African-American woman are both complex and unique, based on similarities in experiences with racism and sexism stereotyping and in a shared history”(Love 11.) Black women’s history in feminism has been infrequent. Their battle is not only with sexism, but also also race and how they are not seen as equals within white culture because of their skin color even though for centuries they did nothing but get traded, sold, and taken from their home lands. Despite this they just wanted be treated as equals, but they are invisible to the white community. “Where did my body end and the crystal and white world begin?”(Ellison 238.) Ralph Ellison writes in his novel, Invisible Man. They have had to overcome the adversity and other matters dealing with their race. Katie Love writes in her article, “ Black feminism is a branch of feminism specifically focusing on the unique experience of having multiple identities (intersectionality), specifically race, class, and gender”(Love 11.) The battle for equality has over stretch the fact that they are not only women, but also women that despite their class are treated the same. Ralph Ellison, the author of Invisible Man writes in regard to african-americans in society, “I am invisible, understand, simply because people
By expressing this with the African American society of women who are continuously torched by the demanding words of men, McLune appeals strongly to all American women’s intellect of equality and respect. Women should not have to be judged by men and expect to be treated as if they owe anyone something, let alone have to be mistreated and belittled, if that were to be the case then men should be treated the same, therefore McLune’s audience, should understand that that is not how you define a black woman in any terms.
In the monograph, Ain’t I A Woman: Black Women and Feminism, the author describes the complexity of black womanhood from a black women’s perspectives. This book shows the impact of sexism on the lives of black women, discussing the persistent racism of the women’s movement. Even with the many present issues, “scholars in this field are in a unique position because of their ability to explore the intersection of race, sex, and class as experienced by black women in ways that are impossible for other segments of the population” (Sheftall
In an attempt to define Black Feminism, Collins clarifies that it must “avoid the idealist position that ideas can be evaluated in isolation from the groups that create them (Collins 385).” This clarification forms her basis for why Black Feminism is necessary, and who it serves. Thinking about feminism historically, the concerns of black women were pushed aside in favor of fighting sexism; a notable example occurs within the Suffrage movement, where votes for white women were prioritized over women of color in order to push such legislation through. And even when feminism began looking at other social injustices, such as racism and class issues, often only prominent feminists were invited to the discussion. What resulted was, and often continues to be, a problem of white women speaking for oppressed people. It’s impossible, Collins argues, to have Black Feminist thought without examining the experiences and positions of African American women. Therefore, Black Feminism must be a movement that “encompasses theoretical interpretations of Black women’s reality by those who live in it (Collins 386).” However, such a definition brings about many questions:
As African-American women address social issues that are important to their life experiences, such as class and race, instead to acknowledge “common oppression” of gender inequality, they are often criticized by “white bourgeois feminists” (hooks, 2000). Their ability to gain any form of equality within society is tarnished by such groups as they develop a “fear of encountering racism” from simply joining this movement (hooks, 2000). As white men, black men, and white women oppress them, their issues are often ignored due to reoccurring stereotypes and myths that claim black women are strong, independent, and “superhuman” (hooks, 2000). It becomes extremely difficult to seek liberation and equity within a “racist, sexist, and classist” society, as their gender and race causes them to be at the “bottom of the occupational ladder” and “social status” (hooks, 2000, pg. 16). As black women are perceived to demonstrate strength and dynamic qualities as white women perpetrate the image of being