Title: Herland Charlotte Perkins Gilman
1Herland- Charlotte Perkins Gilman
2Biography (1860-1935)
- She was born Charlotte Anna Perkins, on July 3,
1860, in Hartford. Her mother was Mary Fitch
Westcott, and her father was Frederic Beecher
Perkins. She was the great granddaughter of Lyman
Beecher, and the great-niece of Henry Ward
Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe. - In 1884, at the age of 24, Gilman married Charles
W. Stetson, a local artist. Soon after, the birth
of her first child, Gilman suffered from a near
nervous breakdown. This experience led her to
move to California, get a divorce, and leave her
daughter in the care of her ex-husband. In
California, Gilman who was poor, turned to
writing as a way of earning money. - Gilman wrote poetry, and short stories, among
them "The Yellow Wallpaper," which later became a
feminist classic. Among her poetry, and fiction
short stories, Gilman wrote many non-fiction
stories. Her best known work is Women and
Economics,(1898) which argues that sexual and
maternal roles of women have been over emphasized
to the detriment of their social and economical
potential, and that only economic independence
could bring true freedom. - Gilman, also co-founded the Women's Peace Party
in 1915 with activist Jane Addams. - Gilman learned in 1932 that she had incurable
breast cancer. As an advocate for the
right-to-die, Gilman committed suicide on August
17, 1935 by taking an overdose of chloroform. She
"chose chloroform over cancer" as her
autobiography and suicide note stated.
3Womens Life in the Victorian Period
- Several Key Changes Altered Perceptions of
Womens Roles - Shift to consumption of goods rather than
production - Shift to a (gendered) wage labor market
- Shift to a nuclear family ideal
4Victorian Life (Seurat)
5Birth of the Mass Media
- Clear messages were sent to men and women as to
what the ideal was through the growth of the mass
media. - 1702- First Daily Newspaper
- 1833- Penny Press
- 1837- Telegraph
- 1839 Photography is made more feasible
- 1876 Telephone
- 1879 Light bulb
- 1884 Rolls of Film
- 1894 Motion Pictures
- 1895 Radio
6Mass Media and Consumption
- The evolving capitalist economy required ever
expanding markets. - Consumption is becoming an imperative and a means
of democratic social advancement.
7The Happy Family- Consumption
- The decade of the 1850s was one in which women's
and children's clothing saw a tremendous surge
towards excess. In women's fashions, skirts
widened to the point where wire frames had to be
used to support them each massive skirt sported
flounces, laces, ribbons, or any variety of other
often gaudy trimmings. As the dressing of
children was in a mother's domain, this taste for
high ornamentation couldn't help but spill over
into children's clothing.
8The Cult of True Womanhood (1837-1901)
- Victorian Ideal (1837-1901)
- The attributes of True Womanhood, by which a
woman judged herself and was judged by her
husband, her neighbors, and her society could be
divided into four cardinal virtues - piety,
purity, submissiveness, and domesticity.
9Fashions From Godeys Lady Book- 1850
10Victorian Ladies
- Whether married or single all Victorian women
were expected to be weak and helpless, a fragile
delicate flower incapable of making decisions
beyond selecting the menu and ensuring her many
children were taught moral values. A gentlewoman
ensured that the home was a place of comfort for
her husband and family from the stresses of
Industrial Britain.
11Piety
- Nineteenth-century Americans believed that women
had a particular propensity for religion. The
modern young woman of the 1820s and 1830s was
thought of as a new Eve working with God to bring
the world out of sin through her suffering,
through her pure, and passionless love. - Irreligion in females was considered "the most
revolting human characteristic." Indeed, it was
said that "godless, no woman, mother tho she be."
12Purity
- Female purity was also highly revered. Without
sexual purity, a woman was no woman, but rather a
lower form of being, a "fallen woman," unworthy
of the love of her sex and unfit for their
company. - To contemplate the loss of one's purity brought
tears and hysteria to young women. This made it a
little difficult, and certainly a bit confusing,
to contemplate one's marriage, for in popular
literature, the marriage night was advertised as
the greatest night in a woman's life, the night
when she bestowed upon her husband her greatest
treasure, her virginity. From thence onward, she
was dependent upon him, an empty vessel without
legal or emotional existence of her own.
13Purity Continued
- A woman must guard her treasure with her life.
Despite any male attempt to assault her, she must
remain pure and chaste. She must not give in,
must not give her treasure into the wrong hands. - The following is advice on how to protect oneself
and one's treasure given by Mrs. Eliza Farrar,
author of The Young Woman's Friend "sit not with
another in a place that is too narrow read not
out of the same book let not your eagerness to
see anything induce you to place your head close
to another person's."
14GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK- Philadelphia, January 1850
- PURITY. AN ACROSTICBY ROBERT G. ALLISON.
- SING, my muse, in worthy laysA noble theme
demands thy praise,Radiant with love's brilliant
rays.As zephyrs mid spring's foliage
play,Hallowing the influence of mild May,Joy
and peace around diffusing,O'er each spirit
lonely musing,So is thy charming minstrelsy
- E'en as the gentle zephyr freePure as the light
of stars of heaven,Hallowed by power to Truth
given,And calm as is the breath of evenHope
beckons to a brighter clime,And Fancy wings her
flight sublimeLong may thy gifted muse
rehearseEach grateful theme in glowing verse.
15Purity as Weapon
- Female purity was also viewed as a weapon, to be
used by good women to keep men in control of
their sexual needs and desires, all for their own
good. A woman's only power was seen as coming
through her careful use of sexual virtue. Note
the following quote from a popular ladies
magazine "the man bears rule over his wife's
person and conduct. She bears rule over his
inclinations he governs by law she by
persuasion...The empire of women is the empire of
softness, her commands are caresses, her menaces
are tears."
16GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK- Philadelphia, February
1850 WOMAN'S POWER -BY FRANK J. WALTERS.
- To catch the last expiring sigh,
- When disappointment sink the soul,
- And soothe the pangs of death?
- And round us troubles throng
- When grief exerts its wild control,
- And sorrow's stormy billows roll,
- Then, then, oh! who is strong?
- Man sinks beneath misfortune's blow
- And hope forsakes his breast
- His boasted powers are all laid low,
- His strength is swallowed up in woe,
- When not by woman blest.
- But she can cheer his drooping heart,
- And rouse his soul again
- OH! tell me not that woman's weak,
- Inconstant, or unkind
- Though flippant writers often speak
- As though dame Nature's master freak
- Was molding woman's mind.
- Around the sufferer's lowly bed,
- When palls the heart of men
- When science falls and hope is fled,
- And helpless lies the dying head,
- Oh! who is constant then!
- Who watches, with a tireless eye,
- The faintly heaving breath?
- Who hovers round, for ever nigh,
17- Can bid his cankering cares depart, And, by her
smiling, artless art, - Can soothe his keenest pain.
- Is woman weak? Go as the sword,
- The weapon of the brave,
- Whose look, whose tone, whose lightest word,
- Though e'en but in a whisper heard,
- Commands it as her slave.
- Go ask man's wild and restless heart
- Who can its passions quell
- Who can withdraw hate's venomed dart,
- Bid malice and revenge depart,
- And virtue in it dwell.
- If woman's weak, then what is strong?
- For all things bow to her
- To her man's powers all belong
- For her the bard attunes his song,
- Her truest worshiper.
- Woman, a fearful power is thine
- The mission to the given
- Requires a strength almost divine,
- A bosom that is virtue's shrine,
- A soul allied to heaven.
18Taking Things a Bit Far
- American culture of the early nineteenth century
underwent a purity fetish, such that it touched
even the language of the day, popular decorating,
and myths. This is when Americans began to talk
about limbs for legs (even when referring to the
legs of chairs) and white meat instead of breast
meat (in fowl)--this is the language of
repression. This is when women began to decorate
the limbs of chairs, pianos, tables, to cover
them with fabric so that one would not be
reminded of legs. Proper women were admonished to
separate male and female authors on bookcases,
unless, of course, they were married to each
other. This is also when myth of stork bringing
babies emerges, and that babies came from cabbage
patches.
19Virtue in Popular Culture
- A popular and often reprinted story by Fanny
Forester told the sad tale of "Lucy Dutton." Lucy
"with the seal of innocence upon her heart, and a
rose-leaf upon her cheek," came out of her
vine-covered cottage and ran into a city slicker.
"And Lucy was beautiful and trusting, and
thoughtless... Needs the story be told-
Nay....Lucy was a child - consider how young, how
very untaught - oh! Her innocence was no match
for the sophistry of a gay, city youth! Spring
came and shame was stamped upon the cottage at
the foot of the hill." - The baby died Lucy went mad at the funeral and
finally died herself. And the moral is?
20Give Me Purity or Give Me Death
- The Victorians found sexually attractive women
inherently threatening because they represented a
powerful force that men could not resist or
control (except through figurative death).
Based on Concept of Original Sin (Adam was
tempted by Eve). - Women could supposedly wield these terrible
powers over men through their beauty, so a
physically frail woman would probably be less
aggressive, therefore less threatening and the
preferable type. Reed quotes Katharine M. Rogers,
from her "Troublesome Helpmate" "Insistence on
women's weakness and the sweetness of submission
was a gentle way of keeping them in subjection,
and in subjection, they were prevented from doing
harm" (35).
21Pure as Death
- The most extreme form of this "subjection" of
women can be found in the figure of the beautiful
dead woman, which also became a convention in
Victorian literature. It was common enough to
become a cliche, which rendered an attractive
woman innocuous then on two levels literally,
because as a corpse she is no longer a sexual
object, and metaphorically "Cliche restricts
sexual and intellectual arousal, making more
possible a limited degree of enjoyment but
erasing the potential for adventure" (Michie 89).
According to Dinah Birch, "Murdered woman - women
who become nothing but bodies - feature regularly
in Victorian literature" (104). Birch calls this
phenomenon "sanctified beauty." In order to be
safe, beauty must "become lifeless" (106).
22Submissiveness
- Men were to be movers, and doers--the actors in
life. Women were to be passive bystanders,
submitting to fate, to duty, to God, and to men. - Women were warned that this was the order of
things. The Young Ladies Book summarized for the
unknowledgable, the passive virtues necessary in
women "It is certain that in whatever situation
of life a woman is placed from her cradle to her
grave, a spirit of obedience and submission,
pliability of temper, and humility of mind are
required of her. - Women who sought any type of independence from
men were considered unstable, scary, even insane.
23Submissiveness Cont.
- A true woman knew her place, and knew what
qualities were wanted in her opposite. Said
George Burnap, in The Sphere and Duties of Woman
"She feels herself weak and timid. She needs a
protector. She is in a measure dependent. She
asks for wisdom, constancy, firmness,
perseveredness, and she is willing to repay it
all by the surrender of the full treasure of her
affection. Women despise in men everything like
themselves except a tender heart. It is enough
that she is effeminate and weak she does not
want another like herself." - Such views were commonplace. A number of popular
sayings reiterated "A really sensible woman
feels her dependence. She does what she can, but
she is conscious of her inferiority and therefore
grateful for support." "A woman has a head almost
too small for intellect but just big enough for
love." "True feminine genius is ever timid,
doubtful, and clingingly dependent a perpetual
childhood."
24Making Submissive Women
- Just in case she might not get the point, female
submissiveness and passivity were assured for the
nineteenth century woman by the clothing she was
required to wear. Tight corset lacing closed off
her lungs and pinched her inner organs together.
Large numbers of under garments and the weight of
over dresses limited her physical mobility.
25Understanding Womens Position
- Men and women are made for each other, but their
mutual dependence is not equal. We could survive
without them better than they could without us.
They are dependent on our feelings, on the price
we put on their merits, on the value we set on
their attractions and on their virtues. Thus
womans entire education should be planned in
relation to men. To please men, to be useful to
them, to win their love and respect, to raise
them as children, to care for them as adults,
counsel and console them, make their lives sweet
and pleasant. Rousseau, in Emile, 1762
26And Women Were Assuredly Not Equal- Married
Woman's Property Act 1887
- It was a hypocritical period when relationships
were quite artificial. Until late in the century
in 1887 a married woman could own no property.
Then in 1887 the Married Woman's Property Act
gave women rights to own her own property.
Previously her property, frequently inherited
from her family, belonged to her husband on
marriage. She became the chattel of the man.
During this era if a wife separated from her
husband she had no rights of access to see her
children. A divorced woman had no chance of
acceptance in society again.
27Domesticity
- Woman's place was in the home. Woman's role was
to be busy at those morally uplifting tasks aimed
at maintaining and fulfilling her piety and
purity. - Housework was deemed such an uplifting task.
Godey's Ladies Book argued, "There is more to be
learned about pouring out tea and coffee than
most young ladies are willing to believe."
Needlework and crafts were also approved
activities which kept women in the home, busy
about her tasks of wifely duties and childcare,
keeping the home a cheerful, peaceful place which
would attract men away from the evils of the
outer world.
28GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK Philadelphia, January 1850
29The Development of Domesticity
- The Cult of Domesticity developed as family lost
its function as economic unit. Many of links
between family and community closed off as work
left home. - Emergence of market economy and the devaluation
of women's work. - Increasingly, then, home became a self-contained
unit. - Privacy was a crucial issue for
nineteenth-century families, and can see this
concern in the spatial development of suburbs in
urban areas as families sought single family
dwellings were they could be even more isolated
from others. - Women remained in the home, as a kind of cultural
hostage.
30The Important Influence of Domesticity
- It was widely understood that in order to succeed
in the work world, men had to adopt certain
values and behaviors materialism, aggression,
vulgarity, hardness, rationality. But men also
needed to develop another side to their nature, a
human side, an anticompetitive side. The home was
to be the place where they could do this. This
was where they could express humanistic values,
aesthetic values, love, honor, loyalty and
faithfulness. The home was no longer a unit
valued for its function in the community (or its
economic productiveness), but rather for its
isolation from the community and its service to
its members.
31The Objectification of Women
- Because the world of work was defined as male,
the world of the home was defined as female. Part
of its value lay in its leisurely aspects. Women
increasingly became a complement to leisure, a
kind of useless but beautiful object, set off by
her special setting. The nineteenth-century
household was cluttered with beautiful, ornate
objects--elaborate patterns in cloth covering
walls, ornate furniture, pianos, paintings, and
brick-abrack. Colors were muted--dark and
velvety--all to surround, darken, and deepen the
quiet of the home, and to accentuate the
softness, submissiveness, and leisure of the
woman within it, the angel of the house.
32A Virtuous Woman
- If, however, a woman managed to withstand mans
assaults on her virtue, she demonstrated her
superiority and power over him. - Working class and women of color are
automatically excluded from such definitions.
33Exhortations to Women
- Put strongly by Mrs. Sandford "A really sensible
woman feels her dependence. She does what she
can, but she is conscious of her inferiority, and
therefore grateful for support...." - "True feminine genius," said Grace Greenwood, "is
ever timid, doubtful, and clingingly dependent a
perpetual childhood...". Thus, "if your husband
is abusive, never retort. - A Young Womans Guide to the Harmonious
Development of a Christian Character suggested
that females should "become as little children"
and avoid "a controversial spirit..." Without
comment or criticism the writer affirms that "to
suffer and be silent under suffering seems to be
the great command a woman has to obey..."
34The Machinations of Power
- In the nineteenth century, any form of social
change was tantamount to an attack on womans
virtue. - For example, dress reform
- In an issue of The Ladies Wreath a young lady is
represented in dialogue with her "Professor." The
girl expresses admiration for the bloomer costume
- it gives freedom of motion, is healthful, and
attractive. The Professor sets her straight.
Trousers, he explains, are "only one of the many
manifestations of that wild spirit of socialism
and agrarian radicalism which is at present so
rife in our land..."
35Victorian Gentlemen
36Separate Spheres
3719th Century Attitudes Toward Bodies
- 1) The human body has only a limited amount of
energy. It is a closed system. The expenditure of
energy must, therefore, be closely regulated,
because one activity would drain energy from
another. - 2) The sexual instinct is the most primitive
instinct. Phrenologists located it at the base of
the brain. - 3) Sexual feelings were strong in men, but absent
in women (certainly in ladies). Actually was
conflicted opinion about female
sexuality--passion in women was feared, because
the demands it would make on men were insatiable
and like a vampire, it was feared she would drain
him of his life force). Men were seen in
continual struggle with their passions. In the
interests of their own health, they must control
them--but not expected always to succeed.
38Scientific Sexism and Separate Spheres
- The characteristics of true manhood and womanhood
and the separate spheres of male and female
activity were believed to have a biological
basis. Female nurturance, intuitive morality,
domesticity, passivity, and delicacy, and male
rationality, aggressiveness, independence, and
toughness were all due to their physical makeup. - It was assumed that women were different from
men, both physically and mentally inferior.
39Gender and Evolution
- Victorian theories of evolution believed that
these feminine and masculine attributes traced
back to the lowest forms of life. - A dichotomy of temperaments defined feminine and
masculine an anabolic nature which nurtured
versus a katabolic nature which released energy
respectively. - According to the model, since men only concerned
themselves with fertilization, they could also
spend energies in other arenas, allowing as
Spencer says "the male capacity for abstract
reason... along with an attachment to the idea of
abstract justice...which was a sign of
highly-evolved life." On the other hand, woman's
heavy role in pregnancy, menstruation (considered
a time of illness, debilitation, and temporary
insanity), and child-rearing left very little
energy left for other pursuits. As a result,
women's position in society came from biological
evolution -- she had to stay at home in order to
conserve her energy, while the man could and
needed to go out and hunt or forage.
40- It was assumed that women had a lesser amount of
energy, or "life force" than men. Bodily fluids
like blood were one measure of "life forces."
Because the female reproductive system was more
complex than the male, it was considered
important for women to channel all their energies
into reproduction. Therefore, women were
discouraged from intellectual activity because
blood was needed for the development of the
reproductive organs. This was particularly
important at puberty, when menstruation began and
physical development hastened. - Women who diverted their energy would become
weak, nervous, sterile, or capable only of
bearing sickly and neurotic children. It was
estimated that education took away about 20 of a
woman's vital energy. Pregnant women too must not
strain their brains, because intellectual
activity would divert blood from the fetus, and
result in the physical degeneration of the child,
or their insanity.
41Sexual Appetites
- The roles of men and women understood as thus,
the Victorians still had to deal with the actual
sexual act, wherein the bipolar model still held.
- Earlier on in the century, women were considered
the weaker, more innocent sex. She had little to
no sexual appetite, often capturing all the
sympathy and none of the blame over
indiscretions. Men represented the fallen,
sinful, and lustful creatures, wrongfully taking
advantage of the fragility of women. However,
this situation switched in the later half of the
period women had to be held accountable, while
the men, slaves to their katabolic purposes and
sexual appetites, could not really be blamed.
Therefore, women were portrayed either frigid or
else insatiable. A young lady was only worth as
much as her chastity and appearance of complete
innocence, for women were time bombs just waiting
to be set off. Once led astray, she was the
fallen woman, and nothing could reconcile that
till she died.
42Women's physical inferiority was based on Four
observations
- 1) The visual evidence that women were generally
physically smaller than men. - 2) The belief that women had less physical
stamina than men because they seemed to faint so
much more (Corsets). - 3) The knowledge that women menstruated, and
therefore were believed physically incapacitated
every month. Menstruation was regarded as a
periodic illness inflicted upon women. It was
believed that menstruation could bring on
temporary insanity in women. - 4) Women were deemed more delicate and weak than
men because the female nervous system was finer,
more irritable, and more prone to
over-stimulation and fatigue than the male
nervous system, because of the "unpredictable
nature" of the female reproductive system.
43Biology is Destiny
- Physicians saw women as both the product and the
prisoner of her reproductive system. - The female uterus and ovaries provided the basis
for her social role and her behavioral
characteristics. - One doctor argued that, "It was as if the
Almighty, in creating the female sex, had taken
the uterus and built up a woman around it." The
current model of disease followed by physicians
was called "reflex irritation," and assumed that
any imbalance, any infection, any disorder or
fatigue would cause a reaction elsewhere in the
body. - If one, therefore, had a headache or stomachache,
or became irritable or faint, it was assumed that
the problem was with the reproductive system.
Women were subject to only one disease, then. The
male reproductive system had no parallel degree
of control over the male body. Men had headaches
women had "female complaints."
44Intellectual Inferiority
- Women were deemed intellectually inferior to men
as well as physically inferior. This was based on
two kinds of observations. - 1) Women had smaller brains than men. Natural
scientists measured cranial capacity, and brain
weight and correlated these with intelligence. - 2) It was also said that the female brain was of
an inferior and more primitive type than the male
brain. - Much of this kind of interpretation came out of a
pseudo science called phrenology. Phrenology was
the art of reading the bumps and curves and shape
of the skull. It was thought that the skull
provided evidence of personality and character,
because different parts of the skull housed
different characteristics. It was clear to
phrenologists who studied cranium that "woman is
a constantly growing child, and in the brain, as
in so many other parts of her body, she conforms
to her childish type."
45Coming of Age
- Given attitudes about sexuality, puberty was
considered critical period for both men and
women, and therefore the subject of much advice.
This was the time that men became strong and
vigorous and women became timid and weak. - The period was critical for women and the future
of the human race, because if women did not
develop some equilibrium in their body, they
would not only damage themselves, causing untold
pain, cancer, disease, a difficult menopause, and
early death, but they would also damage their
children. For the nineteenth century believed
that the traits of a child were inherited from
his or her parents, but the laws of heredity
differed from those we now recognize. They
believed that men passed on to their children
their outer frame, their musculature, and their
intellect. Women passed on the condition of their
internal organs, and their emotional stability or
instability.
46The Importance of Marriage
47Social Differences Between Classes of Women
- A wealthy wife was supposed to spend her time
reading, sewing, receiving guests, going
visiting, letter writing, seeing to the servants
and dressing for the part as her husband's social
representative. - For the very poor of Britain things were quite
different. Fifth hand clothes were usual.
Servants ate the pickings left over in a rich
household. The average poor mill worker could
only afford the very inferior stuff, for example
rancid bacon, tired vegetables, green potatoes,
tough old stringy meat, tainted bread, porridge,
cheese, herrings or kippers.
48The Lady and the Maid
49Working Class Life
50Dress, Class Distinction, Hierarchy
- By the end of the Queen Victoria's reign there
were great differences between members of
society, but the most instantly apparent
difference was through the garments worn. - The Victorian head of household dressed his women
to show off family wealth. As the 19th century
progressed dress became more and more lavish
until clothing dripped with lace and beading as
the new century dawned. - A wealthy woman's day was governed by etiquette
rules that encumbered her with up to six wardrobe
changes a day and the needs varied over three
seasons a year. A lady changed through a wide
range of clothing as occasion dictated. - There was morning and mourning dress, walking
dress, town dress, visiting dress, receiving
visitors dress, traveling dress, shooting dress,
golf dress, seaside dress, races dress, concert
dress, opera dress, dinner and ball dress. - Wealthy women in an open carriage which enabled
them to display their clothes and elevated
position in society.
51Dress Reform and the New Woman
52Mens Versus Womens Hats
53The Times are Changing- The Gibson Girl, Bloomers
and Feminists
54Dissent
55Dissent
56What is Feminism?
- Women demanding their full rights as human
beings. - Challenging conceptions of men as a group, and
women as a group. - Rebellion against power structures that keep
women subordinate
57First Wave Feminism (1860s-1950s)
- Primary focus equality of opportunity in the
public realm (men and women should be treated in
the same way) - Key Concerns
- The right to vote
- Access to education
- Entrance to the professions
- Higher pay and safer working conditions
- Dress reform
- Reproductive rights
58- The key concerns of First Wave Feminists
included - Education, employment, the marriage laws, and the
plight of intelligent middle-class single women. - They were not primarily concerned with the
problems of working-class women, First Wave
Feminists largely responded to specific
injustices they had themselves experienced.
59Dress Reform
- The very first dress reformers were the female
political idealists of the French Revolution.
Their idea of women wearing trousers was echoed
in America. - Amelia Bloomer 1818-1894
- In the early Victorian era, the American Mrs.
Amelia Jenks Bloomer (1818-1894), caused quite a
stir when she wrote an article for her feminist
publication 'The Lily'. She tried to promote the
idea of women abandoning their petticoats for a
bi-furcated garment later known as the bloomer
fashion. She suggested that woman would find
trousers like those worn by Turkish women easier
to wear than their voluminous heavy skirts. - The baggy bloomer trousers she liked reached to
the ankle, were frill cuffed and worn with a
simple knee length skirt and bodice. She thought
it a sensible and hygienic option to the boned
fashion bodices and long weighty skirts of the
time.
60Rational Dress Society 1881
- The Rational Dress Society formed in 1881 in
London approved of Mrs. Bloomer's ideas on
practical fashions. The society was formed by
Viscountess Harberton and Mrs. King. They drew
attention to restrictive corsetry and the
immobility caused by fashions of the day. The
Rational Dress Society also sold boneless stays
and promoted fashions that did not deform the
body. - The Rational Dress Society thought no woman
should have to wear more than seven pounds of
underwear. This may still seem like a great deal
of clothing to modern women, but the underwear
was made from bulky gathered cotton or even wool
flannel and both materials were heavier than
shorter silk or modern synthetic garments. The
figure actually halved what had been worn by most
women in 1850 when ladies often wore up to 14
pounds weight of undergarments.
61Key Concerns in Gilman
- Economic Independence
- Dress Reform
- Equitable Distribution of Resources
- Double Standards
62Herland as a Critique of Gender Roles
- Ideals of Both Femininity and Masculinity are
critiqued as divisive- how? - Is the sexless perfection of the women is a
mockery of the purity demanded of women? Or is
it an assumption she maintains?
63Suggested Discussion Questions
- 1) What was Charlotte Perkins Gilman's incentive
to write this story? What goals did she hope it
would accomplish? - 2) What was going on in the world in 1915 to
which Gilman was responding? - 3) Imbedded within Gilman's utopia is her
critique of the role and place of women in
Western cultures. What does Gilman see as the lot
of women in her own society? How does that
compare to the place of women in Herland? - 4) According to Gilman, how did men outside of
Herland gain control over women economically,
socially, culturally, sexually? How did the women
of Herland avoid that fate? Do you agree with
Gilman's assessment of the origins of gender
restrictions? - 5) Gilman traces out the history of the
development of relations between the sexes in
Western culture and in Herland. What are these
histories? How and why do they differ? - 6) Explain how Gilman associates the basic
concepts of Western culture which she sees as
problems--such as "nationalism" and
"patriotism"--with the culture of men. What were
the counterbalancing positive traits women's
culture provided, according to Gilman? - 7) Is a narrative about race visible in Herland?
What race are the women who live in Herland? Is
there any racial difference? To what might you
attribute Gilman's treatment of race? - 8) In what ways is the "feminist utopia" of
Herland feminist?