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The Role Of Women In The Prologue By Anne Bradstreet

Decent Essays

There are not many “major” female writers in American Literature, and writing, traditionally, has always been viewed as a masculine activity. It is therefore very interesting, and even ironic, that the first author published in the newly established Puritan society on the American soil, Anne Bradstreet, was a female. Bradstreet’s work symbolizes both her Puritan and feminine ideals and appeals to a wide audience of readers. Bradstreet’s preaching of feminism is limited by her Puritan values. Conflict is created throughout her writing between this society of Puritan patriarchy that she lived in and her identity as a female. Feminism today remains prominent because even while women’s rights are very strong, women are still fighting for equality …show more content…

“I am obnoxious to each carping tongue/ Who says my hand a needle better fits,/ A poet’s pen all scorn I should thus wrong,/ For such despite they cast of female wits:/ If what I do prove well, it won’t advance,/ They’ll say it’s stol’n, or else it was by chance” (239). In this passage, Bradstreet acknowledges that even if her writing skills are extraordinary, that because she is a woman, no one will accept it or believe it. At this point in time, Bradstreet crying out for recognition, however it was subtle, “Men have precedeny and still excel,/ It is but vain unjustly to wage war;/men can do best, and women know it well/ Preeminence in all and each is yours;/ Yet grant some small acknowledgement of ours” (240). Bradstreet records her observance of men in their natural state, in which she sees them as war hungry, vain and powerful. Consequently, Anne Bradstreet faced a double bind. By voicing her thoughts, opinions, and beliefs, she would have put herself in danger. Yet by not saying anything, she would force herself to continue living in patriarchy; a society of government where men hold the power and women are largely excluded from

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