Womens relations in thethÎntury Outline form

 
																
								

Theme: Relations between women in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Thesis: Relationships between women in the nineteenth century America created a web of love and support for women.  Mothers and daughters, sisters and friends from childhood formed emotional and sometimes physical bonds that lasted lifetimes.  These ties were acknowledged and easily accepted in their societies.  Many women survived unthinkable hardships such as geographical isolation, child birth, and loss of children because of the unconditional love found in their relations with other women.

I. 	Introduction
 	A. Female friendship of 19th century not really studied 	before
	B. Abundance of evidence suggests very strong emotional 	ties between women.
	C. All types of relationships are suggested from 
	sisterly love to passion
	D. In this world men are hardly noted

II. 	Defining and analyzing these relations
	A. Question of method and interpretation
	B. How to view same sex relations
		1.Psychopathology
		2.dichotomy between normal and abnormal
	C. Viewing within a cultural and social setting
	D. Based on the diaries of women from 35 families   
	from 1760s to 1880s
		1.Represents brood range of women
		2.Middle class

III. 	Sensual and platonic
	A. Sarah Butler Wister and Jeannie Field Musgrove
		1. Met while families vacationed; spent 2 years 
		together at boarding school
		2. throughout life wrote to eachother talking of 
		their deep affection and their anguish when apart
		3. Marriage brought physical separation but nor 
		emotional.
		4. Made references that may imply a relationship 
		that is not necessarily platonic
		5. Friendship lasted their entire lives	
	B. Molly and Helena
		1. Met at boarding school
		2. Formed friendship similar to that of Sarah and 
		Jeannie
		3. many references to a physical relation 
		4. marriage brought depression and changes because 
		of now having male lovers.
		5. Molly tells Helena she loves her as "wives do
		love their husbands"
	C. Significance of these letters
		1. Do not define as hetero or homosexual but as
		examples of the intensity of the emotional bond
		2. Force us to place female love in a particular
		historical context

IV. 	Emotional function of such female love
	A. American society characterized by strict gender-role 
	separation.  
		1. women formed supportive networks that came with 
		rituals for every important event in a woman's life
		from birth to death
		2. these emotions supported by strict restrictions
		in relations between young men and women.  Two 
		totally separate spheres existed, women's and men's
	B. The woman's world was a cycle of home, church, and 
	visiting other women.  This world was inhabited solely 
	by women and children.  Help with domestic during 	illness and other problems. Vacations often designed for
	old friends to meet again.

V.	Women and their female kin
	A. Women's female kin were the core of this world of 
	female ties.  
		1.Relatives provided the nucleus around 
		which groups of friends and networks revolved.
		2.Much of a woman's life could be focuses around
		her family and extended family (in-laws)
	B. The mother-daughter relationship is at the center of 		this world.  The daughters relied on their mothers for
	support and learned their female duties from them, sort 
	of an apprenticeship.
	C. through relations with female kin, the web grew 
	through the non-relative friends of kin as a girl
	grew she made her own friends and they were incorporated
	into this familial world.
	
VI. 	Rituals in the life of a woman
	A. Marriage was one of the great rituals. Support 
	surrounded the bride for months before hand.
	B. Childbirth was a solely female ritual, friends and
	relatives were present through the entire process.

VII. Conclusion
	 The relationships between women during this era was core to their lives and survival.  Without the love, support, and rituals surrounding their daily lives together, many of the women would not have survived the hardships that often presented themselves in life. 
 
Point of Analysis:  I feel that the author was a bit long winded in her explanations of some things.  There are many things that she repeats.  I also feel that she could have presented more about the lives of men.  After reading this, I wonder what the men did all day and if they had relationships like this with their friends and male kin.  It is a great essay and does show vividly the lives of women during this time

Point of Synthesis:  This article really helped me to understand the women during this time much more.  To see their lives on a much more personal level, and how they socialized really creates a deeper and more personal understanding of women here.  Connecting this with their political lives, regional, and religious helps to make the circle complete and create a true understanding of women during this era.
		
 


























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