Thursday, January 23, 2020
Defining the Victorian Woman Essay -- Expository Definition Essays
Defining the Victorian Woman      Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   In the  Victorian Age, there existed a certain ideology of what constituted the      perfect Victorian woman. In the beginning of the eighteenth century, young  girls      began attending schools that offered basic skills such as reading, writing,  and      math. Manuals of etiquette and conduct instructed young girls in manners of       society and the home (Basch 3). All of this prepared a young woman for  marriage,      which, in the nineteenth century, was "put forward as being the culminating       point of a woman's life" (Basch 16). Thus, the perfect woman was also the       perfect wife, an active part of the family, with specific regard to the  children      (Vicinus ix). Yet, although the perfect woman was a married woman, not all       marriages were perfect. Victorian society set strict standards for the roles  of      women, specifically middle class women, as wives and mothers. Women often did       not benefit from being married in many respects, such as their personal  rights.      In addition, the census of 1850 "revealed a significant imbalance between the       sexes," creating a surplus of single women (Lerner 176). Many of these single       women joined the ranks of spinsters and old maids due to this imbalance in  the      population. However, society did not give unmarried women the same roles as       married women. Society challenged these women because it believed that a  woman      without a husband was worthless. Society did not respect the position of  these      unmarried women, often making them outcasts. Yet, there esd a small sect of       unmarried women that did not allow society's rules to interfere with their  idea      of what life should be like. Th...              ...  or said. Instead, old maids flung themselves at life, unattached and      uninhibited, in the best possible way so as to get as much out of it as      possible. Supported historically by the likes of great Victorian female  authors,      these old maids laughed at life, and themselves, showing the perfect  Victorian      wives there could be more to life than fitting society's mold.                  Works Cited      Ã       Auerbach, Nina. Woman and the Demon: The Life of a Victorian Myth.  London:      Harvard UP, 1982.     Ã       Basch, Francoise. Relative Creatures: Victorian Women in Society and the  Novel.      New York: Schocken, 1974.      Ã       Lerner, Laurence. The Victorians. New  York: Homes and Meier, 1978.      Ã       Vicinus, Martha. Introduction.The Perfect Victorian Lady.  Bloomington:  Indiana     UP, 1972. Vii - xv.                 Ã       Ã             Ã  Ã                        
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.