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FREE ESSAY ON WOMEN AND WRITING

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Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and Women's Writing
A look at one of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu's letters as an example of women's writing and history. -- 750 words; MLA

Gender and Writing in "Orlando"
A look at the impact of gender on writing in Virginia Woolf's "Orlando." -- 1,000 words; MLA

New Women and the Press
A review of several articles on the role of women and the press in China. -- 1,250 words;

Feminist Approaches to Women's Writing
Critical review of British feminist author, Fay Weldon. -- 1,176 words; MLA

American Women, Politics, and the Written Word
Analysis of women's writing. -- 1,500 words; MLA

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WOMEN AND WRITING

Midterm Assignment : Women and writing
Since the beginning of times, human beings have found various ways to express themselves
and more specifically how to declare their feelings and emotions. We all know that art
(in a general term) is supposed to be the tool used for expression. People from different
communities, cultural backgrounds, and religions, have been appealed to manifest and
share their uniqueness through art. Art, whether it was music, painting, sculpting or
writing has been highly censured through time because of its contents of truth. The
majorities of a society did not allow minorities to fully express themselves with fear of
manifestations and revolts . Women, as a minority have fought to tell the truth. In order
to understand better the meaning of Women's writing, we will first analyze the factors
that pushed women to write, then we will go over the obstacles that women encountered and
finally, we will discuss what the writers wanted to achieve through their writing.
Factors that pushed women to write
There are writers who need to make sense of the world they live(Dorothy Allison, Trash,
p.19.) This sentence shows that the writer needed to write to see and understand herself
through writing. This young white woman was living a life filled with alcohol and drug
addiction, she tried to escape that trap by fooling herself and by rebuilding a total new
idealistic image of her person (working as a social worker.) However, throughout her
progression, she has been writing everything about herself on a yellow pad, whatever she
would do, wherever she would be, those yellow pads were there, as a representation of her
truth. She could fool herself, but not her yellow pads, her truth was written there.
Allison as many women in the world has been trying to hide her suffering. Constantly
fooling herself, she still had to yell out her truth, this, by spreading her pain on
paper. However, the papers were taboo, just like someone would litter an embarrassing
amount of trash. Allison had to take out her story and anger, even if they were full of
shame. She could not live without writing, it was a matter of survival. This urge to
write was shared by some other women writers.
The search of an understanding was the factor that pushed Bell Hooks to write I began to
feel uncertain, displaced, estranged even, this was the condition of my spirit when I
decided to be a writer, to seek for that light in words (Bell Hooks, remembered ruptures,
p.15) after that she declares Searching for a space were writing could be understood, I
asked for a diary (Bell Hooks, remembered ruptures, p.15.) Writing was a way to
understand herself a little like Dorothy Allison, a way to look at one's own person in a
global manner, from a different angle, in other words, a way to be objective about
oneself 'situation. 
Not only do women write for themselves with the thought that nobody can understand them,
but they also write for others, a way to make a declaration to the world, a way to change
the truth by saying it . In her writings, Sandra Cisneros implies that she wants to
change the world. In her book The House on Mango Street she declares that she wants to
leave the unpleasant neighborhood of Mango street, however, she says that she will come
back, probably not physically, but at least trough her book. Coming back might mean that
she wanted to do something to change Mango street, and that is trough her book, that's
why she wrote it. 
Edwidge Danticat tells us how her desire to write was consuming her in a society where
Women's writing was absolutely forbidden, something to do in the corner. Danticat learned
how her female ancestors have been expressing themselves through nothing else than
cooking, hair braiding or even carving potatoes. But she wanted to perpetuate the
creativity of her ancestors, she just needed to do it through writing. It was their
whispers that pushed you, their murmurs over pots sizzling in your head. A thousand women
urging you to speak through the blunt tip of your pencil. (Edwidge Danticat, Kirk? Krak!
p.8.) By writing, she would have passed along a culture, just like braiding or cooking.
However, her writing was threatening the natural functioning of a patriarchal society. 
Whether women write for themselves or for others, the main matter is that they write for
an urge of understanding. There is a clear desire of comprehension.
Obstacles that women encountered
In her paper A Room of One's Own, Virginia Woolf wonders ironically why women are poor?
She then tells us that it would have been near to impossible for a woman of that era to
be wealthy. Women couldn't do anything else than have children and be submissive
housewives, Making a fortune and bearing thirteen children-no human being could stand it
(Virginia Woolf, A Room of One's Own, p.22.) And even if women had been able to earn
money, they could not keep it until 1870. Unable to keep her money, a woman gives up the
idea to earn it, and so , she confirms her idea that her natural place is in the house.
This last idea was (and still is) adopted in most of the places of the world. Most of the
world's societies have defined women as a housekeeper. But how could this endanger their
ability to write? It could be said that if women are doomed to stay home taking care of
the house, their business is nowhere else. Men do not want to be invaded in the
workplace, so women stay home. Also staying home could just as well include writing at
home. But we all know that only about sixty years ago, reading was profaned for women. A
women literate was the devil incarnated. This was probably set that way because we know
that reading and writing both develop the ability to think in a critical manner, and
again, men did not want to have rivals in that sector. Maybe Woolf tried to warn us in
her paper since she declared that women need a room of their own to be able to write. To
be able to write, women needed a material and financial independence. Apparently, the
major obstacle to women's writing was the presence, influence and domination of men. 
It Is in fact hard to be a rebel in an already very set and rooted culture. In Danticat's
society, writing was forbidden, something to do in the corner when you could have been
learning to cook. She describes how writing was considered a curse, by giving us the
explanations her mother gave her. She was a prisoner of her education and culture. Again,
it was the same concept of society's manipulation and conditioning. If Danticat had had
tried to rebel, she would have probably been seen as the devil you and your writing
demons in your head (Edwidge Danticat, Kirk? Krak! p.10.), therefore, she would have been
left on the side and set as an example to any other young girl that would have had her
ideas. There was always a fear to disappoint family, community and society by not
standing up to her good old culture You remember her silence when you laid your first
notebook in front of her, her disappointment when you told her that words would be your
life's work, like the kitchen had always been hers. . (Edwidge Danticat, Kirk? Krak!
p.7.) The society Danticat was living in was very intolerant, and there is to believe
that the sanctions were very strict for leaving the natural destiny of a woman, the
cultural imperialism she was living in was totalitarian. 
What the writers wanted to achieve by writing
A woman who writes may want to achieve different tasks. As we have seen, a woman may have
the urge to write, Bell Hooks for instance, because she needs to understand herself since
she doesn't find understanding among her surrounding. She could also need to write like
Allison Dorothy, because she needs to face herself and she has so much inside her that
can not been taken out unless it is trough writing. A woman may need to write to reveal a
truth to the world the way Sandra Cisneros did it. Also, just like Edwidge Dandicat, a
woman may want to give the voice to kitchen poets in order to fight cultural imperialism.
Virginia Woolf as well probably surprised (or shocked) many people by trying to fight
cultural imperialism by approaching the taboo of Lesbianism Cloe likes Olivia...do not
blush (Virginia Woolf, A Room of One's Own, p.82.)
Since the beginning of times, human beings have always needed to express themselves,
whether they are male or female. It is crucial to the development of our societies that
people speak out loud, so, whether it is spoken by a male or a female, the message has to
go through. Also, each individual will express only his or her own feelings. That is
maybe why, we did not see any man talking about Lesbianism around the 1920s, it might
also be why no men wrote anything like the concept of the Red Clowns of Sandra Cisneros
in the House on Mango Street. In other words, some things may just not be perceivable to
men, just as other might not be to women. It is not said here that there is a distinctive
separation between male and female writing, there might just be a different way of
thinking. It is therefore of the utmost importance for the sake of the good development
of our world, that everybody gets a chance to express and share his or her ideas, in the
least censured manner possible. 

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