Clever Manka' And 'The Story Of An Essay

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¶ … Clever Manka' and 'The Story of an Hour', could readily be told by someone with a feminist agenda. The first depicts the intelligence of woman despite male attempts to conceal that intelligence from public knowledge. The second depicts woman's longing to be free that is belligerently misinterpreted by males as her desire to be married. Both essays depict males as construing woman to be dependent on males. Both authors, however, imply that woman has an autonomous self that is free of males and would be quite content and able to live an independent existence. In 'Clever Manka', we have the plot of a maiden who helps both her father and her husband with her intelligence. Both men seek to deny that their wisdom came from the woman: "At first the shepherd tried not to tell, but when the burgomaster pressed him he confessed that they came from his daughter" (Fillmore, *). And later, the burgomaster himself is embarrassed that his wife had outsmarted him. Observe, too, that, all the while, he has actively excluded his wife from any of his business concerns and prohibited her involvement in his issues. The...

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Note: he does not consult her to see if she is willing to marry him. He treats her as an object and announces that if her physical attributes match those of her mental attributes, he would marry her. He, in other words, evaluates her objectively according to the assets that she possesses and treats her as one more article around his home, or as potential property of his, deciding whether or not to 'purchase' according to her physical properties.
Later, as penalty, he arbitrarily divorces her, again without consulting her considering that divorce from him is the worst punishment that he can accord the woman. He depersonalizes her and, in his egoism and selfishness, treats her again as object considering that he can embrace and renounce her whensoever he wishes. Manka, herself, is not taken into consideration.

In a similar way, Mrs. Mallard too, in 'The Story of an Hour," is considered by the men-folk to…

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Chopin, K. The Story of an Hour

Parker Fillmore Clever Manka


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