Anne Bonny
Publié le 30/01/2013
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good way but they can also be viewed as distractions.
Rediker also talks about the harsh attitude of males
pirates towards women, which is one of the reasons why so few women actually appeared on pirate ships
during the eighteenth century.
He also notes that Read and Bonny were brought up in a harsh environment that
forced them to become determined and strong.
They represented strength and were highly celebrated by lower
class women, which I find interesting because it shows class solidarity and a sense of unity in both social class
and gender.
In her text “If I Were a Man”, Gilman uses sarcasm when she describes the “true”
woman simply by putting the word “true” in quotation marks.
Further in her description of a
“true” woman, she puts a lot of terms such as “the social” or
“society” in quotation marks as well, which clearly shows her sarcasm about what a is
considered a “true” woman and how a “true” woman is supposed to behave.
It is
important that Mollie is a “true” woman because the way she sees men before she gets to spend
a day as her husband would be different if she weren't “true”.
Mollie is the opposite of her
husband: she is little, she loves pretty clothes and she doesn't work to earn a living like him.
The fact that she
possesses these “true” woman characteristics is what makes her want to be a man.
Her wish is
granted when she gets to experience one day as a man.
She dresses as a man during that day and suddenly
develops a new resentment for women's hats for example.
Had she not crossed dressed not only would she
have not completely felt like a man, she would have not experienced these feelings and been able to mix with
other men in the train.
These three texts were very interesting as they taught me about gender disparities during the eighteen century.
They also gave me new insights about the status of women and how some women such as Mary Read and
Anne Bonny, distinguished themselves through their courage and audacity.
Works Cited
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins.
“If I Were a Man”.
1914.
Online.
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Liens utiles
- Mary Read and Anne Bonny
- Anne de noailles: « Être dans la nature ainsi qu’un arbre humain, / Étendre ses désirs comme un profond feuillage » ,« Être le jour qui monte et l’ombre qui descend »
- le journal d'Anne Franck (fiche de lecture)
- Fous DE Bassan (les) d'Anne Hébert (analyse détaillée)
- Le personnage de GUILLEROY (comtesse Anne de), née Paradin de Guy de Maupassant