Wednesday, March 20, 2019
Comparing Women in The Bell Jar and Enormous Changes at the Last Minute
Exploitation of Wo workforce overt in The ships bell Jar and Enormous Changes at the Last  beautiful   In their manifesto, the Redstockings argued that the relationship between  workforce and women was a class relationship, and that the men repressed and controlled the women. The women were objects, and the men owned them. They said that, as a class, women argon exploited as sex objects, breeders, domestic servants, and cheap labor by the male class(Bloom, Takin it to the Streets, 486).  humankindy of the women characters in The Bell Jar and Enormous Changes at the Last Minute give us examples of this repression and exploitation.  In both The Bell Jar and Enormous Changes at the Last Minute, we often see women as being subordinate to men. For example, in Debts, one of Grace Paleys characters is happy because she has  entrap a husband to serve(Paley, Enormous Changes at the Last Minute, 11). Her  deportment has no meaning apart from her role as married woman. She is defined by her hus   band. The idea that women  be defined by their husband is so  permeating that we even find it in the language of the stories. In The Burdened Man there is a newspaper article describing the shooting of a  wife and her lover by her husband. The husband and the lover are called by name, Sgt. Armand Kielly and Alfred Ciaro, respectively. The wife is only referred to as Mrs. Kielly. In The Bell Jar, when Buddy Willard proposes to Esther, he asks her How would you  resembling to be Mrs. Buddy Willard?(Plath, The Bell Jar, 75). In both these instances, the language  apply defines the women in terms of their husband. This casual indication of dominance says a  striking deal about the culture.  The exploitation of women as sex objects is also  easygoing to find. Both works contain extreme i...  ...(Bloom, 486). As a class, men exploit them for personal use, both economically and sexually. They do everything they can to  check women in an inferior position. This repression is so pervasive th   at it is even found in the language of the women themselves. Correcting this problem is not a matter of changing  private relationships within the society. As the manifesto says, the conflicts between individual men and women are political conflicts that can only be solved collectively(486). In order for things to improve, there must be some change in society at a base level.  Works Cited Bloom, Alexander and Wini Breines, eds. Takin it to the Streets. Oxford University Press,  mod York, 1995. Paley, Grace. Enormous Changes at the Last Minute. Farrar, Strauss, and Giroux,  smart York, 1974. Plath, Sylvia. The Bell Jar. Harper and Row, New York, 1971.                   
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