10.3.1
Feminist Analysis
Feminist Analysis
Feminist Analysis
Feminist criticism focuses on notions of gender, as well as power relations, particularly the unequal power relations between men and women.
![Illustrative background for Feminist analysis](https://image-v2.cdn.app.senecalearning.com/2018-07/4156e7f0-ffb1-4fac-80a4-81c7bea5d494/gender-discrimination,h_400,q_80,w_640.jpg)
![Illustrative background for Feminist analysis ?? "content](https://image-v2.cdn.app.senecalearning.com/2018-07/4156e7f0-ffb1-4fac-80a4-81c7bea5d494/gender-discrimination,h_400,q_80,w_640.jpg)
Feminist analysis
Feminist analysis
- Feminist criticism is based on ideas from the feminist movement which began to gain momentum in the course of the 1960s.
- Like Marxism, it focuses on power relations, particularly the unequal power relations between men and women.
- It examines notions of gender, and the extent to which ideas of what constitute masculinity or femininity have been constructed.
![Illustrative background for 1. Stereotypes](https://image-v2.cdn.app.senecalearning.com/2018-11/1f3235d3-b4f6-4fd5-bbb8-7d57918c343f/stockings-legs-tights-,h_400,q_80,w_640.jpg)
![Illustrative background for 1. Stereotypes ?? "content](https://image-v2.cdn.app.senecalearning.com/2018-11/1f3235d3-b4f6-4fd5-bbb8-7d57918c343f/stockings-legs-tights-,h_400,q_80,w_640.jpg)
- Stereotypes
- Stereotypes
- The following ideas are central tenets of feminist thinking:
- Literature reflects, and helps to perpetuate, the negative stereotyping of women.
- Women are stereotyped from a male point of view in ‘positive’ ways such as the “self-sacrificing angel” or in ‘negative’ ways such as the “dangerous seductress”.
- These stereotypes promote the idea that female behaviour should be more passive and powerless, preventing equality between the sexes.
- Feminist criticism often looks to challenge these stereotypes.
![Illustrative background for 2. Cultural constructions](https://image-v2.cdn.app.senecalearning.com/2018-09/60178432-45bb-4dac-8580-464a18d6480b/couple-married-wife-husband-,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
![Illustrative background for 2. Cultural constructions ?? "content](https://image-v2.cdn.app.senecalearning.com/2018-09/60178432-45bb-4dac-8580-464a18d6480b/couple-married-wife-husband-,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
- Cultural constructions
- Cultural constructions
- Gender roles have little to do with how females (and males) really are, but with the way that society sees them - how they are culturally constructed.
- The notion of women being naturally “timid”, or “helpless” is to construct a role for them.
- Likewise, masculinity, with its connotations of strength and control is also a construction.
- Feminist criticism often looks to challenge the assumptions that lead to these constructed (artificial) ideas of how men and women ‘should’ behave.
![Illustrative background for 3. Reinforcement](https://image-v2.cdn.app.senecalearning.com/2018-05/e96d7e91-613b-4825-9b91-60c33f326c6c/shutterstock_169575122,h_400,q_80,w_640.jpg)
![Illustrative background for 3. Reinforcement ?? "content](https://image-v2.cdn.app.senecalearning.com/2018-05/e96d7e91-613b-4825-9b91-60c33f326c6c/shutterstock_169575122,h_400,q_80,w_640.jpg)
- Reinforcement
- Reinforcement
- Texts, even those written by women, often reflect and reinforce patriarchal authority (a society in which men hold the power).
- Women are often portrayed as “the other” in texts, whereas men are seen as the “norm”.
- This can often be seen in the language and imagery used to describe male and female characters, language which perpetuates false assumptions about gender.
![Illustrative background for Separation](https://image-v2.cdn.app.senecalearning.com/2018-09/9b9d633f-882e-464e-83ab-199a84e9007c/gender-312411_1280,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
![Illustrative background for Separation ?? "content](https://image-v2.cdn.app.senecalearning.com/2018-09/9b9d633f-882e-464e-83ab-199a84e9007c/gender-312411_1280,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
Separation
Separation
- The private world of a character cannot be separated from the political.
- Even in our domestic lives, power relations help to determine how we act.
1Introduction
1.1Introductions
2Act One
3Act Two
4Extended Passage Analysis
5Character Profiles
5.1Willy & Linda Loman
5.2Biff & Happy Loman
5.3Other Characters
6Key Themes
7Writing Techniques
7.1Structure
7.3Expressionism
8Historical Context
8.1Historical Context
9Literary Context
9.1Tragedy
10Critical Debates
10.1Introduction
10.2The Marxist Reading
10.3The Feminist Reading
10.4The Eco-Critical Reading
10.5Other Debates
Jump to other topics
1Introduction
1.1Introductions
2Act One
3Act Two
4Extended Passage Analysis
5Character Profiles
5.1Willy & Linda Loman
5.2Biff & Happy Loman
5.3Other Characters
6Key Themes
7Writing Techniques
7.1Structure
7.3Expressionism
8Historical Context
8.1Historical Context
9Literary Context
9.1Tragedy
10Critical Debates
10.1Introduction
10.2The Marxist Reading
10.3The Feminist Reading
10.4The Eco-Critical Reading
10.5Other Debates
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