Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Conflicts in Elizabeth Stuart Phelps The Angel Over the Right Shoulder
Conflicts in Elizabeth Stuart Phelps' The Angel Over the Right Shoulder     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã   "The Angel Over the Right Shoulder" is  fascinating because of the conflict it uncovers between a woman's need to  fulfill her domestic role and her need to develop as an individual. The story  was published in 1852, when the American people were struggling with the role of  women in society. The author, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, introduces two opposing  possibilities for this role. One is the woman whose entire being revolves around  her domestic sphere and who has no individual identity. The other is an  individual who, although fulfilling the role of mother and wife, takes time to  cultivate and develop her own interests and person. This essay will focus on  discussing the social and historical concepts intertwined with these two  opposing viewpoints concerning the role of women in the middle 19th century  rather then evaluating them in terms of the story. This will give the reader  information necessary to better understand and analyze the events of the text.       Ã       The first possibility of woman's ideal social role, revolving entirely around  her domestic responsibilities, has its origin in the past. Women of white middle  class standing had historically taken on the responsibilities of clothing,  feeding and caring for all members of the family, while the men had ensured that  the raw materials for these duties existed. Stereotypically, the husband would  work the farm cultivating the crops and caring for the animals, while the wife  would turn these raw materials into the necessities of life, including food and  clothing. When industry began to take over in the early 1800's the specific  tasks of gender shifted, but the general spheres d...              ...ideas about the new role of women  in society while reading "The Angel Over The Right Shoulder", and to consider  the ways in which Phelps encourages or discourages each one. I also encourage  the reader to delve more deeply into the wealth of information surrounding this  very important time period in the history of the United States, to understand  where Phelps' ideas were generated and why she may have seemed to favor of one  role of women over another.      Ã       Works Cited     Graves, A.J., Mrs. Woman in America: Being an Examination into the Moral and  Intellectual Condition of American Female Society. New York: Harper,  1847,c1841     Melder, Keith. Beginnings of Sisterhood: The American Woman's Rights  Movement, 1800-1850. New York: Schocken Books, 1977.      Phelps, Elizabeth Stuart. The Angel Over the Right Shoulder. Andover: Warren  F. Draper, 1852.      Ã                        
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