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Mary Wilkins Freeman's The Revolt Of Mother

Decent Essays

Mary E. Wilkins Freeman was born in New England in 1852 at the start of the Victorian era. This time during American history women had a certain expected role in society. Their area of influence was known as the domestic sphere. This meant women were in charge of the home, children, and the moral values and eternal souls of the family. Many women during this time were becoming “the single, highly educated, economically autonomous New Woman” (Rosenberg, 245). They were breaking out of the domestic sphere and looking for something more. These women were “eschewing marriage...espoused innovative, often radical, economic and social reforms” (Rosenberg, 245) and were altogether more independent than women before them. Mary Wilkins Freeman …show more content…

“Mother” starts her story rather ferociously telling her husband, “I ain’t goin’ into the house till you tell me what them men are doin’ over there in the field” (Freeman, 10). Unfortunately, Adoniram Penn is building a new barn on the site set aside for her new home 40 years earlier. “Father” tells her he wants her to “go into the house...an’tend to [her] own affairs” (Freeman, 10). Mary Wilkins Freeman purposefully writes Adoniram telling Sarah her place is in the house with the children and he wants her to stay there. Freeman wants her women readers to relate to this situation of male dominance. When Sarah does finally revolt the significance of that revolt will have a deeper meaning for Freeman’s readers, they want Sarah to outwit her husband. Adoniram does not quite recognize the woman he married for who she really is. Sarah Penn was more than willing to take on the role of wife and mother as long as he fulfilled his role as provider for the family and his promise of a new house was still an option. When he went back on his word of building her home Adoniram received a glimpse of the true woman he married. When the reader looks closely at her there is a strength of character Sarah Penn cannot hide forever. Freeman writes that Sarah “looked as if the meekness had been the result of her own will, never the will of another” (Freeman, 10). …show more content…

Wilkins Freeman used Louisa Ellis and Sarah Penn in two different ways to convey the message that women not only needed independence, but they needed to be heard. To Freeman it did not matter if you were an old maid or a married woman. The important idea to get across to the women of her time was to come up with their own ideas, to figure out their own place in society, and to become their own person. Women during this time were taught to be subservient and selfless, but Freeman wants something different for her characters and the for the women of America. Freeman stated that women authors “must write, above all things, the truth as far as she can see the truth” (Reichardt, 129). This statement proves that she believed in her characters. She believed that women authors should write about things they found to be interesting and relevant. Therefore, Freeman wrote about strong-willed women who were able to carve their own paths in the world and not simple women who would follow along on the path laid before

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