I am not a woman. I am not a woman. The article by Deborah Gray White shows the trials and difficulties faced by African-American women during the civil war in infamous farms. In this book, White explains the images of "Jebebe" and "Mummy" and how they became the most vulnerable American members before the United States. She compared the lives of men and women of slavery society and their real differences. The role of women has been revealed through the life cycle of slaves, family life, the social network of slaves, and the civil war.
Perhaps it is noteworthy that this is not a story between a weak girl and an old man. This is the story of a girl and a woman, a girl becomes a woman over time, and in a flash, a woman becomes a girl. The difference in power is not necessarily clear. Heart's essay is simple, but like Monroe, it is mitigated by the moment of unexpected beauty. When supper at dinner, when she can tell the girl to be ashamed to appear in the public, she says: "She is frustrated, usually hidden, and you can hide the table like a draft I will break through. "
"Hidden things" of Michelle Heart is about the relationship between a young woman and a professor at a university. They are well known, but "girls" and "women" are attracted by each other but they show little affection to each other. But the relationship is important for girls and readers who tell stories. Reading "Hiddensee", I think about "Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship" by Alice Munro. In that story, the butler was mistaken for a mischievous child that her employer's son fell in love with her. This is the story I read with my eyes with my eyes; the disaster setting, somehow the result is OK. As I am worried that this relationship will hurt girls, reading "Hiddensee" is similar. Women have all their power and are often cruel. She commented, "The relationship is difficult, usually they are not worth it," and said, "No one is cute at your age."
By liberation of women, the mother - daughter relationship broke. Many mothers have an "old-fashioned" view of what women should be. Jamaican Kinkade's short story "Girl" is a typical example of this relationship. The theme of "girls" strongly suggests that women should be housewives and that she should act in some way. Many older women believe that the role of women in their lives is domesticated. The theme of the girl reinforces this perspective. The third person viewpoint emphasizes the idea that women are at their own home. "Clean up white clothes on Monday, put them on the mountain of stone, rinse off color clothes on Tuesday, then put them to dry to clothes." (Kinkaid 296) This is because the mother does this to his daughter It is a way to say that it is a way to do.