"Cult of domesticity republican motherhood" Essays and Research Papers

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    Cult of Domesticity

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    The Cult of Domesticity: Securing the 19th Century Woman in the Home During the Antebellum age of America‚ new values and ideals began to arise. These ideals were reflected in the households of middle class citizens and grouped together to create the “Cult of Domesticity.” The cult helped form the foundation of female inferiority in the male dominated society. As “slaves” to the home‚ women were to uphold morals that were no longer relevant in the new industrialized world. The ideas that led

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    The Cult of Domesticity

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    25/1/12 The Cult of Domesticity was a guideline that required women to be inferior and submissive compared to men. Many of Emily Dickinson’s poems were written in secret because of the treatment of women in her time period. “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Gilman and “The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin were written from their position of male dominance and domesticated women. Many of the ideals specifically submissiveness‚ domesticity and piety present in the Cult of Domesticity‚ are represented

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    argue that the “cult of domesticity” and child-centered families were a restriction on women status and condition. However‚ I believe they were key reasons as to why women status and conditions improved. Yes they further separated the private world of women from the public world of men‚ but I feel like these ideals did so much more. As single women who worked jobs married‚ they dropped their paying occupations to work as wives and mothers. They were immersed in the “cult of domesticity”‚ which became

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    Cult Of Domesticity

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    19th and early 20th century‚ strict and confining gender roles existed for women throughout the United States. While men were able to pursue out-of-house careers‚ women were trapped in a Cult of Domesticity‚ disabling them from acting in a “manly” manner in fear of losing their reputation. In this Cult of Domesticity‚ women were born and bred simply to marry a man with a higher social status and monetary value‚ and procreate with them to form a family. However‚ because the women of this era were raised

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    Republican Motherhood

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    Kaley Ganey and Allie Linaugh October 15‚ 2012 Stuart Harmening APUSH The Republican Motherhood and Education for Women The republican motherhood was essentially the beginning of the new era for women. Before‚ women were not allowed to go to school‚ and we not educated as they were thought to belong in the home. Before the late eighteenth century‚ their role was to God and the care of the home and their children. However‚ Enlightened thinkers knew that it was the role of the mother to make

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    According to the ideals of "the Cult of of True Womanhood" which was also called the "The Cult of Domesticity " women were supposed to hold to perfect virtue in all senses. The women who followed these standards tended to be generally literate and lived in the northeast‚ particularly New York and Massachusetts. Women were put in the center of the domestic living and were expected to fulfill the roles of a calm and nurturing and supportive mother‚ a loving and faithful wife‚ and a passive‚ delicate

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    Megan McGlauchlen Women’s Voice Essay Women faced many restrictions during the 1800’s based solely on their gender. The Cult of Domesticity served as a basic guide that explained the appropriate ways women of this time period were expected to act. It essentially laid out four proper characteristics women had to portray: piety‚ purity‚ domesticity‚ and submissiveness. Many authors captured the difficulties in a woman’s life with having to deal with such strict expectations in their writing. These

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    Garfield showed republican motherhood in a wonderful way‚ because she gave everything she had so James Garfield was never left hungry‚ unclothed‚ or uneducated after her husband had died. She gave her entire life savings to James Garfield so he was able to attend a semester of college‚ and he worked as a janitor for the rest of his tuition although because he was such a smart student he was able to get a job as a professor. Lucretia Garfield‚ James’ wife‚ also showed republican motherhood because a lot

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    The author states that the role of the “Republican Mother” influenced American women and their relationship with the state after the American Revolution. Before‚ women weren’t recognized in Enlightenment literature unless they were to being spoken about in the regards of men or if their families .During the essay‚ Kerber explains the role of the Republican Motherhood and how it grew to become a image that many women gathered behind. Women‚ more specifically the mothers during the time had a political

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    society changed economically‚ socially‚ and into the adoption of republican motherhood and cult of domesticity. During the time of the Revolutionary War‚ society regarded women as the teachers of the "sons of liberty" which resulted in a higher status for women; their new importance led to the cult of domesticity in which women began taking more opportunities and a new attitude towards life (True Womanhood). Both "republican motherhood" and

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