Women's Roles In The 1800s

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Authors in the 1800s Authors in the 1800s tried to make changes to gender roles in the social status. The men were working class men and the women were either housewives or seen as inferior. This gave many women more leisure time, which they often used to get involved in political and social issues and spending time at home and doing the shopping, they were seen as important aspects of the coming consumer market. So then, the advertising industry targeted many of its campaigns specifically toward women. As a result, women's status in society started creeping up in the late 1800s. The workplace and the home were separated, which led to men often competing with women for factory jobs. However, women were seen unjustly as inferior, as Sojourner…show more content…
In “The Story of an Hour” Mrs. Mallard was made to stay home because she was a woman who had a heart condition. She gained a lot of time to do whatever she wanted at home, but did she didn’t really have to stay. Women were expected to restrict their interests to the home and the family. It was just that women would always listen to their husbands and most of the time, the husband’s word always triumphs over the woman’s wants. Mrs. Mallard longed for freedom “There stood, facing the open window, a comfortable, roomy armchair. Into this she sank, pressed down by a physical exhaustion that haunted her body and seemed to reach into her soul.” and through that window, was her freedom. Just like Mrs. Mallard, the woman in “The Yellow Wallpaper” was confined to a home with no leave. Charlotte Perkins Gilman portrayed an emotional attitude for the story about how the woman gradually becomes insane due to isolation by her husband. Women in this time period knew they would be provided money and shelter for the rest of their lives, and they would be viewed as having filled society's role for woman. Because if you think that “… it is like a woman stooping down and creeping about behind that pattern.” you will be considered
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