Feminist work Herland as feminism is the advocacy of women's social, political and all other rights (Landden House Dictionary). This story is described like this. This is a society consisting entirely of women and does not require men. We see the human viewpoint through the eyes of the speaker. He offered us three different male views about women. Herland uses traditional stereotypes about women and is completely overturning them. Everything that was once appreciated by women and men's criteria has been deprived.
Herland was one of the three feminist utopias first published at Forerunner, including Mobile Hills (1911) and the sequel to Herland "With Her in Ourland" (1916). A woman in Herland is strong, healthy, energetic and energetic, full of "sunbreeze." Here, child rearing is organized and specialized (All Herlan women want to give birth, but not all women are suited); poverty, crime, violence there is no. Since they live in a virtual paradise on the earth, Herland women do not need to believe in some abstractions called Heaven.
In her feminist utopian novel "Herland" (1915), Gilman introduced her reader to a cooperative women's country. Her role is based on Gilman's idea in her nonfiction work "Family: Work and Influence" (1903) and her series article "Women's Clothing" (1915). In both works, Gilman opposed the situation of women who were downgraded to restrict clothing and to care for children and their families. She imagined a world where women could get rid of the chores of cooking and cleaning and work on intellectual pursuit - a world where women breathe freely after they toss off their bodies.
About ten years after the publication of "Sultana's Dream", another book "Charlotte Gilman's Hellland" began to progress in the science fiction path and became an important feminist masterpiece. In the past 2000 years, Herland has explored destinations that no one runs and develops mainly around three men who are dominated by women. The residents of this world proved to be sustainable and effective. They also inherited the recital gift. These three people are increasingly embarrassed, but they are from the world, but Herland proves that he is really modern and ideal. But whatever the story is, this story is not without flaws. Gilman bridged this story through anti-abortion and racist speech while promoting women's rights.