This paper examines the ways in which classed and gendered ideologies in the novel Little Women repress Jo, Amy, and Meg March. Beth, because of her function as a domesticated type rather than as an individual woman, does not suffer from the defeat of her desires. Therefore, she is not considered extensively in this paper. Jo, Amy, and Meg are each convinced that meeting middle class social standards by becoming humble and altruistic wives is more vital to their roles as women than fulfilling individual goals and ambitions. Jo, who surrenders her long-cherished goal of becoming a famous and self-supporting author in order to write moralistic fiction that will please society, is often seen as the most prominent of the sisters. However, Amy a...
The movement for women's rights during the years 19001940 was a cause rich in diversity. This thesis...
By learning literary works, students do not only improve their vocabulary and grammar, but also broa...
27 p. : il. -- Bibliogr.: p. 26-27The present paper aims to analyze two of the films based on Little...
While American girls of the twenty-first century enjoy more freedoms than their mothers and grandmot...
This discussion of the experiences and challenges of female writers focuses on four authors: Louisa ...
This thesis focuses upon Dorothy L. Sayers' views of the difficulties faced by educated women in Eng...
Jo March is a feminist icon. But, while her feminism may not resemble that of the modern day, Louisa...
Suppression of one’s emotions is defined as a shared experience among the March sisters in Louisa Ma...
This paper explores the character of Marmee in Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women in order to illustra...
Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women (1868) is a timeless piece of writing about four sisters living in ...
Women’s resistance toward domestic roles is viewed from the main characters in the novel “Little Wom...
My thesis seeks to explore the way that gender influences both the writing and representation of cha...
Little Women tells about the struggle of the four March sisters named Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy in faci...
This thesis analyzes Lewis Carroll's 1865 work Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and places it within...
This discussion is limited to the development of gifted women, centering on Karen Arnold, Kathleen N...
The movement for women's rights during the years 19001940 was a cause rich in diversity. This thesis...
By learning literary works, students do not only improve their vocabulary and grammar, but also broa...
27 p. : il. -- Bibliogr.: p. 26-27The present paper aims to analyze two of the films based on Little...
While American girls of the twenty-first century enjoy more freedoms than their mothers and grandmot...
This discussion of the experiences and challenges of female writers focuses on four authors: Louisa ...
This thesis focuses upon Dorothy L. Sayers' views of the difficulties faced by educated women in Eng...
Jo March is a feminist icon. But, while her feminism may not resemble that of the modern day, Louisa...
Suppression of one’s emotions is defined as a shared experience among the March sisters in Louisa Ma...
This paper explores the character of Marmee in Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women in order to illustra...
Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women (1868) is a timeless piece of writing about four sisters living in ...
Women’s resistance toward domestic roles is viewed from the main characters in the novel “Little Wom...
My thesis seeks to explore the way that gender influences both the writing and representation of cha...
Little Women tells about the struggle of the four March sisters named Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy in faci...
This thesis analyzes Lewis Carroll's 1865 work Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and places it within...
This discussion is limited to the development of gifted women, centering on Karen Arnold, Kathleen N...
The movement for women's rights during the years 19001940 was a cause rich in diversity. This thesis...
By learning literary works, students do not only improve their vocabulary and grammar, but also broa...
27 p. : il. -- Bibliogr.: p. 26-27The present paper aims to analyze two of the films based on Little...