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Women Poets Throughout American History, the Work Essay

Pages:2 (580 words)

Sources:1

Subject:People

Topic:Anne Bradstreet

Document Type:Essay

Document:#5335059


Women Poets

Throughout American history, the work of American literary artists has helped shape how people think about America and its values. In the modern moment, American literary artists and those involved in other media tend to represent ideals of freedom, autonomy, and individuality. However, this is a perception which has only developed through centuries of artists trying to speak with a unique American voice. Artists who have been oppressed are most successful in their attempts to explain how difficult existence is for people who have to live with some character trait which allows the social setting to suppress. Women writers, in particular, have used their artistry to show the intelligence of females and to help carve a niche in a male-dominated society. Three female poetry writers from three distinct historical periods, Anne Bradstreet who lived in the colonial period, Phillis Wheatley who was a slave living during the first years of American independence was educated by her masters, and Emily Dickinson who lived in the middle to late nineteenth century, each used the perspective of the female in order to show how women were unfairly marginalized within the American society and how unfair this treatment was.

As a Puritan woman living in the British colonies which would become the first of the United States, Anne Bradstreet was reared in a religion where women were subservient to men, life was hard, and the whole of one's life was centered on The Bible. Women have traditionally been subservient to men, but in communities where Christianity dominates the moral and social code, this marginalization is even more palpable. In her poem "The Prologue," Bradstreet writes that her desire to be a poet is against the norm for women of her time and…


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