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Gender Inequality In The Chrysanthemums By John Steinbeck

Decent Essays

The Chrysanthemums is undoubtedly an indictment on gender inequality in a society that fears and represses any sign of feminine intelligence or vitality. Elisa’s energy, ambition, intelligence, and beauty go to waste like the discarded chrysanthemums on the side of the road. On the contrary, the less intelligent and mundane male protagonists pursue a more busy and fulfilling life as evident in the friendly chat between Elisa's husband and the male strangers and the carefree life of the poor fixer. Steinbeck glamorously and tactfully exploits real and fantastical motives to critique suppression, the aesthetic and intellectual resources inherent in femininity in a patriarchal society. The Chrysanthemums form the ideal title of the story as a motive of the suppressed aesthetic and intellectual value of the feminine race in a patriarchal society. The lovely, strong, and prolific life of the chrysanthemums reflects the suppressed aesthetic, manual, and intellectual potential of Elisa’s character in a male-dominated society. Furthermore, the chrysanthemums serve as the only avenue for unlocking Elisa’s suppressed feminine potential and beauty. Elisa’s face “was eager and mature and handsome” (207) as she worked with the chrysanthemums. Ironically, the feminine potential and beauty unleashed by the chrysanthemums is interpreted from the masculine lens as evidence from the use of the male phrase "handsome" referring to Elisa's beauty. The patriarchal society in the Chrysanthemums

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